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Impact of methane and black carbon mitigation on forcing and temperature: a multi-model scenario analysis

Authors :
Steven J. Smith
Jean Chateau
Olivier Durand-Lasserve
Kalyn Dorheim
Jérôme Hilaire
Joeri Rogelj
Kimon Keramidas
Maria Cecilia P. Moura
Laurent Drouet
Gunnar Luderer
Mathijs Harmsen
Keywan Riahi
Shinichiro Fujimori
Kenichi Wada
Oliver Fricko
Zbigniew Klimont
Tatsuya Hanaoka
Fuminori Sano
Detlef P. van Vuuren
Environmental Sciences
Source :
Climatic Change, 163, 1427. Springer Netherlands
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

The relatively short atmospheric lifetimes of methane (CH4) and black carbon (BC) have focused attention on the potential for reducing anthropogenic climate change by reducing Short-Lived Climate Forcer (SLCF) emissions. This paper examines radiative forcing and global mean temperature results from the Energy Modeling Forum (EMF)-30 multi-model suite of scenarios addressing CH4 and BC mitigation, the two major short-lived climate forcers. Central estimates of temperature reductions in 2040 from an idealized scenario focused on reductions in methane and black carbon emissions ranged from 0.18–0.26 °C across the nine participating models. Reductions in methane emissions drive 60% or more of these temperature reductions by 2040, although the methane impact also depends on auxiliary reductions that depend on the economic structure of the model. Climate model parameter uncertainty has a large impact on results, with SLCF reductions resulting in as much as 0.3–0.7 °C by 2040. We find that the substantial overlap between a SLCF-focused policy and a stringent and comprehensive climate policy that reduces greenhouse gas emissions means that additional SLCF emission reductions result in, at most, a small additional benefit of ~ 0.1 °C in the 2030–2040 time frame.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650009
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Climatic Change, 163, 1427. Springer Netherlands
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dfa862c54bfafefa497389447240d895