In early October, at its 14th meeting, the Supervisory Body of the Paris Agreement’s A6.4 mechanism made a significant advancement by adopting the Sustainable Development Tool (SD Tool).
This marks a major milestone in aligning international carbon markets with sustainable development priorities while ensuring that the ‘do-no-harm’ principle is upheld.
The SD Tool will be mandatory to use and aims to ensure that projects developed under Article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions but also support the ambitions across all 17 Sustainable Development Goals. The tool will be critical for enhancing the quality of carbon markets by incorporating comprehensive environmental and social safeguards.
The Sustainable Development Initiative (SDI), carried out jointly by UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre and Wuppertal Institute, welcomes this achievement, and has published a short technical analysis of the tool, which can be downloaded here.
The SD Tool has three main components:
- Environmental and Social Safeguards
A key feature of the SD Tool is the inclusion of stringent environmental and social safeguards. Projects are required to identify, evaluate, and mitigate any potential adverse impacts on the environment and communities. These safeguards ensure that no harm is caused to ecosystems or local populations.
- Impact on Sustainable Development
Beyond avoiding harm, the SD Tool facilitates positive contributions to sustainable development. The tool provides a framework to measure and report on how each project not only mitigates climate change but also drives development that is equitable and sustainable.
- Validation and Verification
The SD Tool introduces a rigorous validation and verification process to ensure accountability in the market. Continuous stakeholder engagement and monitoring of activity-specific indicators that the process does not end with an initial assessment.
The adoption of the SD Tool also signals a convergence between voluntary and compliance carbon markets, with the potential to elevate best practices across both sectors.
Pilot phase and future developments
The SDI will play a key role in piloting the SD Tool’s use, providing capacity-building to selected countries to support its effective application.
This piloting will explore the tool’s real-world applicability, including how it can be integrated into national frameworks and enhance bilateral agreements under Article 6.2.
The pilot results aims to help refine the tool, making it more practical for use across various carbon market projects.