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Energy system developments and investments in the decisive decade for the Paris Agreement goals

Authors :
Bertram, Christoph
Riahi, Keywan
Hilaire, Jérôme
Bosetti, Valentina
Drouet, Laurent
Fricko, Oliver
Malik, Aman
Nogueira, Larissa Pupo
Van Der Zwaan, Bob
Van Ruijven, Bas
Van Vuuren, Detlef
Weitzel, Matthias
Longa, Francesco Dalla
De Boer, Harmen Sytze
Emmerling, Johannes
Fosse, Florian
Fragkiadakis, Kostas
Harmsen, Mathijs
Keramidas, Kimon
Kishimoto, Paul Natsuo
Kriegler, Elmar
Krey, Volker
Paroussos, Leonidas
Saygin, Deger
Vrontisi, Zoi
Luderer, Gunnar
Bertram, Christoph
Riahi, Keywan
Hilaire, Jérôme
Bosetti, Valentina
Drouet, Laurent
Fricko, Oliver
Malik, Aman
Nogueira, Larissa Pupo
Van Der Zwaan, Bob
Van Ruijven, Bas
Van Vuuren, Detlef
Weitzel, Matthias
Longa, Francesco Dalla
De Boer, Harmen Sytze
Emmerling, Johannes
Fosse, Florian
Fragkiadakis, Kostas
Harmsen, Mathijs
Keramidas, Kimon
Kishimoto, Paul Natsuo
Kriegler, Elmar
Krey, Volker
Paroussos, Leonidas
Saygin, Deger
Vrontisi, Zoi
Luderer, Gunnar
Source :
Environmental Research Letters vol.16 (2021) nr.7 p.1-11 [ISSN 1748-9318]
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Paris Agreement does not only stipulate to limit the global average temperature increase to well below 2 °C, it also calls for 'making finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions'. Consequently, there is an urgent need to understand the implications of climate targets for energy systems and quantify the associated investment requirements in the coming decade. A meaningful analysis must however consider the near-term mitigation requirements to avoid the overshoot of a temperature goal. It must also include the recently observed fast technological progress in key mitigation options. Here, we use a new and unique scenario ensemble that limit peak warming by construction and that stems from seven up-to-date integrated assessment models. This allows us to study the near-term implications of different limits to peak temperature increase under a consistent and up-to-date set of assumptions. We find that ambitious immediate action allows for limiting median warming outcomes to well below 2 °C in all models. By contrast, current nationally determined contributions for 2030 would add around 0.2 °C of peak warming, leading to an unavoidable transgression of 1.5 °C in all models, and 2 °C in some. In contrast to the incremental changes as foreseen by current plans, ambitious peak warming targets require decisive emission cuts until 2030, with the most substantial contribution to decarbonization coming from the power sector. Therefore, investments into low-carbon power generation need to increase beyond current levels to meet the Paris goals, especially for solar and wind technologies and related system enhancements for electricity transmission, distribution and storage. Estimates on absolute investment levels, up-scaling of other low-carbon power generation technologies and investment shares in less ambitious scenarios vary considerably across models. In scenarios limiting peak warming to below 2 °C, while coal is phased out quickly, oil

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Environmental Research Letters vol.16 (2021) nr.7 p.1-11 [ISSN 1748-9318]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac09ae, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445820237
Document Type :
Electronic Resource