“Tucuruí-Macapá-Manaus Electrical Interconnected grid” (for simplicity hereafter referred to simply as the “LT-Amazonas Project”)
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Host party(ies) Brazil
Methodology(ies) AM0104
Standardised Baselines N/A
Estimated annual reductions* 1,911,289
Start date of first crediting period. 01 Dec 13
Length of first crediting period. 10 years
DOE/AE TUEV-RHEIN
Period for comments 25 Jul 12 - 23 Aug 12
PP(s) for which DOE have a contractual obligation Linhas de Macapá Transmissora de Energia S.A. (LMTE)
Linhas de Xingu Transmissora de Energia S.A. (LXTE)
Manaus Transmissora de Energia S.A. (MTE)
The operational/applicant entity working on this project has decided to make the Project Design Document (PDD) publicly available directly on the UNFCCC CDM website.
PDD PDD (449 KB)
Local stakeholder consultation report: N/A
Impact assessment summary: N/A
Submission of comments to the DOE/AE Compilation of submitted inputs:
I am astonished to see that this long time ago planned expansion of the Brazilian interconnected grid to isolated systems is being proposed as a CDM project! First of all, as pointed about in the PDD,  the whole implementation, operation and maintenance of the related transmission lines are being promoted under the terms and conditions of earlier signed public concession service contracts. Have CDM benefits been considered at the time the terms and conditions for these  concession contracts were elaborated? Have CDM benefits been considered at the time these concession contracts were signed? Were all the bidders considering to only implement and operate the transmission lines if CDM income could be granted? 

I believe that as per the concession contract, once it was signed, the project developers would have to implement the transmission lines anyway (regardless of the registration of the initiative as a CDM project). Thus, how can it be claimed that without CDM the "project" is considered as too risky? 

Secondly, even if carbon credits were fairly eligible for this venture, the Federal Government of Brazil should be the owner of the carbon credits (otherwise stipulated in the concession contracts). Transmission lines are part of the power system of Brazil. In my opinion, as in the case of the hydraulic energy potentials, transmission lines under concession contracts should be regarded as a public goods (by considering the current regulatory framework of the Brazilian power sector). Thus, in the worse case (carbon credits being issued for this long time ago planned venture), the people from Brazil (represented through the Federal Government) are the ones to have the ownership for these carbon credits. I believe that prior to provide a Letter of Approval to this project, the DNA of Brazil should check the issue with the Federal public attorney of Brazil.       

Helio Villas Boas
Submitted by: Helio Villas Boas


The comment period is over.
* Emission reductions in metric tonnes of CO2 equivalent per annum that are based on the estimates provided by the project participants in unvalidated PDDs