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This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered.
What I think should be changed (include citations):
Change "Chief Executive Officer: Bill Tyndall" to "Executive Director: Allison Bender-Corbett"
Remove "Leila Yim Surratt" from list of key people.
Update revenue and expenses to be in-line with latest figures.
"Programs" section requires a complete rewrite, as the current programs of the organization differ completely from what is described.
New sections should be "Climate Finance", "Methane Mitigation", and "Carbon Markets".
An additional section might include information on the specific projects and topics CCAP is involved with across different regions of the world.
Why it should be changed:
The current information on the page is, in some cases, more than a decade out-of-date and no longer reflects the current status, goals, and priorities of the organization
References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):
Not done for now: Allison is currently listed as the Ex Dir. As for the other request, please provide appropriately referenced changes you want implemented. We cannot do the work for you. PK650 (talk) 09:33, 16 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Understood, thank you. I've put together a comprehensive list of changes below.
Edit request
Replace the current "Overview" section with:
CCAP works to establish best practices and bring actors together to address climate change. Their work aims to provide pathways and policy solutions for countries, local and regional communities, and other actors seeking to meet or scale up their climate goals.
Add a new section titled "History" containing the following text:
CCAP was founded in 1985 by Ned Helme, a researcher and environmental policy advocate.
The original goals of the organization included designing and advocating for a market-based acid rain control program in the US Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. Additionally, CCAP built a coalition to include SO2 emissions trading programs in the Clean Air Act amendments. CCAP’s policy and advocacy work resulted in the creation of the Acid Rain Program.
CCAP also assisted in designing the flexibility mechanisms (including the Clean Development Mechanism and international emissions trading) of the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement that spanned more than 15 years until its replacement by the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Replace the current "Programs" section with:
CCAP currently works in three areas of climate change mitigation: methane mitigation, climate finance, and carbon markets. The organization is structured to allow researchers in each area of expertise to collaborate on projects and combine research and resources.[1]
(Subtitle) Methane Mitigation
CCAP aims to reduce methane emissions in the waste sector by advancing policies, programs and projects that contribute to sustainable waste management and accelerate methane mitigation initiatives. CCAP’s methane mitigation programs include:
The Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC, provide link) Latin America Regional Waste City Network. CCAP led 24 cities in a forum to coordinate best practices and build the capacity of waste stakeholders at the municipal level.
The Mitigation Action Facility project in Peru, which aims to transform the country’s waste management practices from a system that relies on landfills to one that introduces circular economy concepts and derives value from the organic fraction of the country’s waste stream.
The Recycle Organics (RO) Program, which aims to accelerate the implementation of methane mitigation projects in the waste sector. Recycle Organics has a special focus on Small Island Developing States (SIDS) as they historically contribute the least to climate change but are typically hit the hardest by its cascading effects.[2]
(Subtitle) Climate Finance
CCAP provides integrated solutions and insights on climate finance. Their work focuses on three main pathways, which are:
Providing decarbonization and low carbon transition solutions, which prepare the public policy tools and mechanisms to mobilize climate finance at the national and subnational level.
Building sustainable finance mechanisms targeted to channel climate finance solutions to direct beneficiaries and align strategies and procedures with regulators, governments, and the private sector.
Catalyzing climate finance with solutions aimed at accelerating public-private collaboration for climate finance mobilization.
CCAP’s climate finance record includes:
Action through the Mitigation Action Implementation Network (MAIN) to support the design and implementation of Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) and Low-Emissions Development Strategies (LEDS) in developing countries through regionally-based dialogues, web-based exchanges, and practitioner networks.
Supporting the development of the Mitigation Action Facility, the first fund dedicated to financing the implementation of NAMAs.
CCAP provides resources for actors to cooperate and mutually benefit from a sustainable transition to a carbon market-based economy. The organization advocates for Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, and their work emphasizes working with local communities, governments, and the private sector and focusing on communication, equity, and social welfare.
CCAP’s carbon markets record includes:
Configuring analytical tools to strengthen the role of local communities concerning carbon markets in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Developing guidelines for just agreements in the context of REDD+ Voluntary Carbon Markets projects for Pacific and Amazonian regions.
Developing solutions and other tools for Cap-and-Trade policies in California, Minnesota, and elsewhere in the United States.
Providing advice on the development of the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism and other flexibility mechanisms and serving as lead designer on a team for the European Commission that helped define the European Union Emission Trading System and the associated monitoring, reporting and verification guidelines that were established to help meet Europe’s compliance obligations under the Protocol.
Helping design and pushing for inclusion of the market-based Acid Rain Trading Program as part of the U.S. 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, and later undertaking economic analysis and building a coalition resulting in the development of a regional NOx control program.[4]
N The revenue and expenses parameters were not updated because no updated figures were provided for review.
N The Overview section was not updated, because no references were provided with the request.
N The History section was not updated, because no references were provided with the request.
N The Programs section was not updated, because the proposed section contained claims which were only referenced by the subject organization. Per WP:ADVOCACY, the article is not the place for the organization to have its claims detailed.
This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered.
Thank you for the quick reply. Here is an edited version of the above request with those concerns addressed. Please let me know if there are any more edits necessary.
Edit request
Replace the current "Overview" section with:
The Center for Clean Air Policy is an independent, nonprofit think tank that was founded in 1985 in the United States and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. CCAP works on climate and air quality policy issues at the local, national and international levels.[1]
Add a new section titled "History" containing the following text:
CCAP was founded in 1985 by Ned Helme, a researcher and environmental policy advocate. The organization originally was a United-States nonprofit organization aimed to design and advocate for a market-based acid rain control program in the United States.
Following the passage of the US Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, which CCAP lists as one of its major successes, the organization shifted its vision to combat climate change from a global perspective. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, CCAP assisted in designing the flexibility mechanisms (including the Clean Development Mechanism and international emissions trading) of the Kyoto Protocol,[2] an international agreement that spanned more than 15 years until its replacement by the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Replace the current "Programs" section with:
CCAP currently works in three climate change-related focus areas: methane mitigation, climate finance, and carbon markets. The organization is structured to allow researchers in each area of expertise to collaborate on projects and combine research and resources.[3]
(Subtitle) Methane Mitigation
CCAP aims to reduce methane emissions in the waste sector by advancing policies, programs and projects that contribute to sustainable waste management and accelerate methane mitigation initiatives. CCAP’s methane mitigation work includes:
Assisting with the development of the Mitigation Action Facility project in Peru, which aims to reduce the country's reliance on landfills and introduce circular economy concepts to derive value from the organic fraction of the waste stream.[4]
The Recycle Organics (RO) Program, which aims to accelerate the implementation of methane mitigation projects in the waste sector and developing a community of practice in regions around the world to address methane emissions. RO has a special focus on Small Island Developing States (SIDS), as they historically contribute the least to climate change but are typically hit the hardest by its effects.[5]
(Subtitle) Climate Finance
CCAP provides decarbonization and low carbon transition solutions, which prepare the public policy tools and mechanisms to mobilize climate finance at the national and subnational level and build sustainable finance mechanisms targeted to channel climate finance solutions to direct beneficiaries and align strategies and procedures with regulators, governments, and the private sector.
CCAP’s climate finance track record includes:
Action through the Mitigation Action Implementation Network (MAIN) to support the design and implementation of Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) and Low-Emissions Development Strategies (LEDS) in developing countries. [6]
Supporting the development of the Mitigation Action Facility, the first fund dedicated to financing the implementation of NAMAs.[7]
CCAP provides resources for actors to cooperate and mutually benefit from a sustainable transition to a carbon market-based economy. The organization advocates for Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, and its work emphasizes working with local communities, governments, and the private sector and focusing on communication, equity, and social welfare.
CCAP’s carbon markets record includes:
Developing guidelines for just agreements in the context of REDD+ Voluntary Carbon Markets projects for Pacific and Amazonian regions. [9]
Developing solutions and other tools for Cap-and-Trade policies in California, Minnesota, and elsewhere in the United States.[10]
Providing advice on the development of the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism and other flexibility mechanisms.[2]
Below you will see where proposals from your request have been quoted with reviewer decisions and feedback inserted underneath, either accepting, declining or otherwise commenting upon your proposal(s). Please read the enclosed notes within the proposal review section below for information on each request. Spintendo03:09, 28 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Edit request review 27-JUL-2023
The Center for Clean Air Policy is an independent, nonprofit think tank that was founded in 1985 in the United States and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. CCAP works on climate and air quality policy issues at the local, national and international levels.
Approved.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
CCAP was founded in 1985 by Ned Helme
Approved.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
Following the passage of the US Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, which CCAP lists as one of its major successes, the organization shifted its vision to combat climate change from a global perspective. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, CCAP assisted in designing the flexibility mechanisms (including the Clean Development Mechanism and international emissions trading) of the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement that spanned more than 15 years until its replacement by the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Declined.[note 1]
CCAP currently works in three climate change-related focus areas: methane mitigation, climate finance, and carbon markets.
Approved.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
The organization is structured to allow researchers in each area of expertise to collaborate on projects and combine research and resources.
Declined.[note 2]
CCAP aims to reduce methane emissions in the waste sector by advancing policies, programs and projects that contribute to sustainable waste management and accelerate methane mitigation initiatives. CCAP’s methane mitigation work includes:
Declined.[note 3]
Assisting with the development of the Mitigation Action Facility project in Peru, which aims to reduce the country's reliance on landfills and introduce circular economy concepts to derive value from the organic fraction of the waste stream
Clarification needed.[note 4]
The Recycle Organics (RO) Program, which aims to accelerate the implementation of methane mitigation projects in the waste sector and developing a community of practice in regions around the world to address methane emissions. RO has a special focus on Small Island Developing States (SIDS), as they historically contribute the least to climate change but are typically hit the hardest by its effects.
Declined.[note 5]
CCAP provides decarbonization and low carbon transition solutions, which prepare the public policy tools and mechanisms to mobilize climate finance at the national and subnational level and build sustainable finance mechanisms targeted to channel climate finance solutions to direct beneficiaries and align strategies and procedures with regulators, governments, and the private sector.
Declined.[note 6]
Developing guidelines for just agreements in the context of REDD+ Voluntary Carbon Markets projects for Pacific and Amazonian regions. [9]
Developing solutions and other tools for Cap-and-Trade policies in California, Minnesota, and elsewhere in the United States
Clarification needed.[note 7]
CCAP provides resources for actors to cooperate and mutually benefit from a sustainable transition to a carbon market-based economy. The organization advocates for Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, and its work emphasizes working with local communities, governments, and the private sector and focusing on communication, equity, and social welfare.
Declined.[note 8]
___________
^The provided reference does not validate each and every claim made in the proposed text for this section.
^The provided reference does not confirm this proposed text.
^No source is provided with this information, OR, the only reference within distance of this claim covers claims made regarding the Mitigation Action Facility, OR this information concerns future hypotheticals (e.g., "CCAP aims.." etc.)
^It's not clear what is meant by the term "assisting". Please clarify.
^This claim concerns one of CCAP's vendors/clients/collaborators/associates/colleagues, the Recycle Organics Program. Placing information in the article which directly discusses CCAP would be beneficial; however, placing information about CCAP's partners/clients/etc. in lieu of information about CCAP is not beneficial.
^The text in this portion of the edit request appears to have been copied and pasted from a CCAP source (SeeWP:CLOSEPARAPHRASE.)
^Please provide the page numbers for these two sources where the information may be found.
^This claim is not referenced; OR this claim contains information which the subject organization advocates; OR this information covers work with "local communities, governments and the private sector" without specifying which; OR this claim emphasizes certain other claims made elsewhere in the subject organization's literature.
CCAP was founded in 1985 by Ned Helme, a researcher and environmental policy advocate. The organization’s current mission statement is “to support every step of climate action, from ambition to implementation.”
CCAP lists among its major historical successes the landmark sulfur dioxide trading program in the United States Clean Air Act, the original design for the European Union’s CO2 trading system, the development of the NOx reduction and trading program in the eastern United States, and the comprehensive climate policy strategy for New York State, which led to the creation of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.[1]
Below you will see where proposals from your request have been quoted with reviewer decisions and feedback inserted underneath, either accepting, declining or otherwise commenting upon your proposal(s). Please read the enclosed notes within the proposal review section below for information on each request. Spintendo22:58, 14 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Edit request review 14-AUG-2023
CCAP lists among its major historical successes the landmark sulfur dioxide trading program in the United States Clean Air Act, the original design for the European Union’s CO2 trading system, the development of the NOx reduction and trading program in the eastern United States, and the comprehensive climate policy strategy for New York State, which led to the creation of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, CCAP assisted in designing the Clean Development Mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement that spanned more than 15 years until its replacement by the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Unable to review.[note 1]
From 2016 to 2023, CCAP worked to develop and implement Colombia’s transit-oriented development NAMA.
Approved.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
Additionally, CCAP currently serves as an observer actor for the Green Climate Fund and is a partner of the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC)
Approved.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
CCAP is also a strategic partner of the Recycle Organics program, an organic waste management initiative with a particular focus on Small Island Developing States (SIDS)
Declined.[note 2]
___________
^The provided source, edited by George Philander, is inaccessable beyond the first page covering the CCAP.
^This organization is not independently notable in Wikipedia.