Authors
Ida Sognnaes, Ajay Gambhir, Dirk-Jan van de Ven, Alexandros Nikas, Annela Anger-Kraavi, Ha Bui, Lorenza Campagnolo, Elisa Delpiazzo, Haris Doukas, Sara Giarola, Neil Grant, Adam Hawkes, Alexandre C Köberle, Andrey Kolpakov, Shivika Mittal, Jorge Moreno, Sigit Perdana, Joeri Rogelj, Marc Vielle, Glen P Peters
Publication date
2021/12
Journal
Nature Climate Change
Volume
11
Issue
12
Pages
1055-1062
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Most of the integrated assessment modelling literature focuses on cost-effective pathways towards given temperature goals. Conversely, using seven diverse integrated assessment models, we project global energy CO2 emissions trajectories on the basis of near-term mitigation efforts and two assumptions on how these efforts continue post-2030. Despite finding a wide range of emissions by 2050, nearly all the scenarios have median warming of less than 3 °C in 2100. However, the most optimistic scenario is still insufficient to limit global warming to 2 °C. We furthermore highlight key modelling choices inherent to projecting where emissions are headed. First, emissions are more sensitive to the choice of integrated assessment model than to the assumed mitigation effort, highlighting the importance of heterogeneous model intercomparisons. Differences across models reflect diversity in baseline assumptions …
Total citations
20212022202320244394317
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