In one of the first carbon trading deals in the country, SRF Ltd has forged an agreement with Shell Trading International to deliver 500,000 Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) by April 2007. |
SRF Chairman and Managing Director Arun Bharat Ram said the price per tonne of carbon dioxide offered by Shell was significantly higher than the prevailing market price of $10 per tonne. Bharat Ram, however, refused to divulge the financial value of the deal citing a non-disclosure agreement with Shell. |
One tonne of carbon dioxide reduced through a Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) project, when certified by a designated entity, becomes a tradable CER. |
SRF's oxidation project, which is expected to reduce nearly 38 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent over a ten year period, is a CDM Project of the Kyoto Protocol. It is yet to be registered by the United Nations Framework on Climate Change Convention or the UNFCCC. |
Unlike small and medium enterprises, large companies like SRF are in a better position to negotiate and bargain with buyers of CERs because of their large-scale emissions, said Ram. |
Buyers can rely on big companies to deliver CERs by 2007, failing which they can be fined up to ¤100 per tonne of extra carbon dioxide emission, he added. |
The project has received approvals from the designated national authorities in India, Germany and the UK. The company has announced the commissioning of its HFC-23 oxidation plant in Jhiwana, Rajasthan. |
SRF Ltd is the biggest Nylon Tyre Cord Fabric producer in the country and the eighth largest in the world. |