Keeping warming within the 2°C limit after Copenhagen
Date
2010
Authors
Macintosh, Andrew
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Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
The object of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December 2009 was to reach an agreement on a new international legal architecture for addressing anthropogenic climate change post-2012. It failed in this endeavour, producing a political agreement in the form of the Copenhagen Accord. The Accord sets an ambitious goal of holding the increase in the global average surface temperature to below 2°C. This paper describes 45 CO2-only mitigation scenarios that provide an indication of what would need to be done to stay within the 2°C limit if the international climate negotiations stay on their current path. The results suggest that if developed countries adopt a combined target for 2020 of ≤20% below 1990 levels, global CO2 emissions would probably have to be reduced by ≥5%/yr, and possibly ≥10%/yr, post-2030 (after a decade transitional period) in order to keep warming to 2°C. If aggressive abatement commitments for 2020 are not forthcoming from all the major emitting countries, the likelihood of warming being kept within the 2°C limit is diminutive.
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Keywords
Keywords: Anthropogenic climate change]; Copenhagen; Current paths; Developed countries; Global CO; Surface temperatures; Transitional period; United Nations; Climate change; carbon emission; climate change; emission control; environmental planning; environmental p Climate change; International climate negotiations; Mitigation
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Source
Energy Policy
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Journal article
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2037-12-31