2021
DOI: 10.1038/s41558-021-01215-2
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Cost and attainability of meeting stringent climate targets without overshoot

Abstract: he Paris Agreement sets the framework for international climate action. Within that context, countries are aiming to hold warming well below 2 °C and pursue limiting it to 1.5 °C. How such global temperature outcomes can be achieved has been explored widely in the scientific literature [1][2][3][4] and assessed by the IPCC, for example, in its Fifth Assessment Report (AR5; ref. 5 ) and its Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C (SR1.5; ref. 6 ). Studies explore aspects of the timing and costs of emissions … Show more

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Cited by 161 publications
(120 citation statements)
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“…In addition, some models also represent CDR via direct air capture and enhanced weathering (ref. 31 discusses this in further detail). Not all scenarios report carbon sequestration from land use, so we follow the approach adopted by ref.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition, some models also represent CDR via direct air capture and enhanced weathering (ref. 31 discusses this in further detail). Not all scenarios report carbon sequestration from land use, so we follow the approach adopted by ref.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The set of emission pathways in the AR6 WGIII database represents an ensemble of opportunity that has not been designed with a specific focus on net zero GHGs (Crit III) and therefore does not allow for a systematic analysis of these interdependencies. To the contrary, the net zero carbon budget design approach pursued in a large number of scenarios in the database from the ENGAGE project and others, may lead to less scenarios reaching net zero GHGs compared to an end-of-century budget approach 31 . Other scenarios may deploy large amounts of CDR beyond net zero GHGs by design 26 .…”
Section: (Achieving Net Zero Ghgs)mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Two more recent datasets from NGFS and ENGAGE based on IAMs that include recent trends and understanding (Creutzig et al 2017 ; Riahi et al 2021 ) yield comparably higher estimates of the additional total energy investments for 2020–2024 (335 and 227 billion US$/year; green and black horizontal bars in Fig. 2b , respectively).…”
Section: Five Arguments For a More Comprehensive Analysismentioning
confidence: 95%
“…To further analyse the characteristics of scenario categories beyond the analysis in AR6 we use the concept of overshoot degree years (ODY), which is similar to what was shown as "overshoot severity" in Table 2.SM.12 in SR1.5 (Forster et al, 2018), and was included in the metadata of the SR1.5 scenario database (Rogelj et al, 2018;Huppmann et al, 2018b) as "exceedance severity". Inspired by Geden and Löschel, (2017) and recent scenario studies investigating temperature overshoot (Drouet et al, 2021;Riahi et al, 2021;Johansson, 2021;Tachiiri et al, 2019).…”
Section: Overshoot Degree Yearsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The climate-assessment workflow is available as an installable open-source Python package with an MIT license (Kikstra et al). The code utilises functions of existing scientific software packages including 'pyam' (Huppmann et al, 2021) and has been parallelised to enable doing runs of many scenarios. It could be used as a community tool for scenario assessment that enables both easier access to well-calibrated climate emulators and the possibility to assess a wider range of scenarios due to the possibility of infilling emissions trajectories.…”
Section: Potential For Further Development Of a Community Toolmentioning
confidence: 99%