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Keeping warming within the 2°C limit after Copenhagen

Date

2010

Authors

Macintosh, Andrew

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

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.

Description

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

Citation

Source

Energy Policy

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31
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