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Jun ICHIHARA* and Toshihiro UCHIDA** (*Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Japan ** School of Economics, Chukyo University, Japan)
Abstract:
Criticisms raised against the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) have placed the development of alternative market mechanisms on the official agenda of international climate change negotiations for the past few years. The Joint Crediting Mechanism (JCM), initiated by the Japanese government, intends to offer a simpler and more flexible crediting scheme. However, various context-specific barriers have to be identified and removed for the mechanism to function effectively. For this purpose, this study evaluates factors that are perceived as large barriers by stakeholders in implementing JCM projects. By applying the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) to stakeholders in Indonesia, we found that finance comprises the largest barrier, followed by domestic policies not specifically related to the JCM and insufficient knowledge and capacity. Results indicate that further measures are needed to address these barriers, such as introducing new loan schemes, organizing seminars targeted at local financial institutions, and streamlining domestic policies.
Key Word:
JCM, climate change, CDM, AHP