TY - JOUR
T1 - Ten key short-term sectoral benchmarks to limit warming to 1.5°C
AU - Kuramochi, Takeshi
AU - Höhne, Niklas
AU - Schaeffer, Michiel
AU - Cantzler, Jasmin
AU - Hare, Bill
AU - Deng, Yvonne
AU - Sterl, Sebastian
AU - Hagemann, Markus
AU - Rocha, Marcia
AU - Yanguas-Parra, Paola Andrea
AU - Mir, Goher Ur Rehman
AU - Wong, Lindee
AU - El-Laboudy, Tarik
AU - Wouters, Karlien
AU - Deryng, Delphine
AU - Blok, Kornelis
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This article identifies and quantifies the 10 most important benchmarks for climate action to be taken by 2020–2025 to keep the window open for a 1.5°C-consistent GHG emission pathway. We conducted a comprehensive review of existing emissions scenarios, scanned all sectors and the respective necessary transitions, and distilled the most important short-term benchmarks for action in line with the long-term perspective of the required global low-carbon transition. Owing to the limited carbon budget, combined with the inertia of existing systems, global energy economic models find only limited pathways to stay on track for a 1.5°C world consistent with the long-term temperature goal of the Paris Agreement. The identified benchmarks include:Sustain the current growth rate of renewables and other zero and low-carbon power generation until 2025 to reach 100% share by 2050;No new coal power plants, reduce emissions from existing coal fleet by 30% by 2025;Last fossil fuel passenger car sold by 2035–2050;Develop and agree on a 1.5°C-consistent vision for aviation and shipping;All new buildings fossil-free and near-zero energy by 2020;Increase building renovation rates from less than 1% in 2015 to 5% by 2020;All new installations in emissions-intensive sectors low-carbon after 2020, maximize material efficiency;Reduce emissions from forestry and other land use to 95% below 2010 levels by 2030, stop net deforestation by 2025;Keep agriculture emissions at or below current levels, establish and disseminate regional best practice, ramp up research;Accelerate research and planning for negative emission technology deployment.Key policy insightsThese benchmarks can be used when designing policy options that are 1.5°C, Paris Agreement consistent.They require technology diffusion and sector transformations at a large scale and high speed, in many cases immediate introduction of zero-carbon technologies, not marginal efficiency improvements.For most benchmarks we show that there are signs that the identified needed transitions are possible: in some specific cases it is already happening.
AB - This article identifies and quantifies the 10 most important benchmarks for climate action to be taken by 2020–2025 to keep the window open for a 1.5°C-consistent GHG emission pathway. We conducted a comprehensive review of existing emissions scenarios, scanned all sectors and the respective necessary transitions, and distilled the most important short-term benchmarks for action in line with the long-term perspective of the required global low-carbon transition. Owing to the limited carbon budget, combined with the inertia of existing systems, global energy economic models find only limited pathways to stay on track for a 1.5°C world consistent with the long-term temperature goal of the Paris Agreement. The identified benchmarks include:Sustain the current growth rate of renewables and other zero and low-carbon power generation until 2025 to reach 100% share by 2050;No new coal power plants, reduce emissions from existing coal fleet by 30% by 2025;Last fossil fuel passenger car sold by 2035–2050;Develop and agree on a 1.5°C-consistent vision for aviation and shipping;All new buildings fossil-free and near-zero energy by 2020;Increase building renovation rates from less than 1% in 2015 to 5% by 2020;All new installations in emissions-intensive sectors low-carbon after 2020, maximize material efficiency;Reduce emissions from forestry and other land use to 95% below 2010 levels by 2030, stop net deforestation by 2025;Keep agriculture emissions at or below current levels, establish and disseminate regional best practice, ramp up research;Accelerate research and planning for negative emission technology deployment.Key policy insightsThese benchmarks can be used when designing policy options that are 1.5°C, Paris Agreement consistent.They require technology diffusion and sector transformations at a large scale and high speed, in many cases immediate introduction of zero-carbon technologies, not marginal efficiency improvements.For most benchmarks we show that there are signs that the identified needed transitions are possible: in some specific cases it is already happening.
KW - 1.5°C
KW - Benchmarking
KW - COP21
KW - mitigation scenarios
KW - Paris Agreement
KW - technological change
KW - transition
KW - UNFCCC
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85036644208&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14693062.2017.1397495
DO - 10.1080/14693062.2017.1397495
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85036644208
SN - 1469-3062
VL - 18
SP - 287
EP - 305
JO - Climate Policy
JF - Climate Policy
IS - 3
ER -