Read more here: climateanalytics.org/publications...
Read more here: climateanalytics.org/publications...
Personally, I’m all in on the fight for 1.5ºC. It’s not a magic line in the sand, but it’s a lifeline for climate justice.
Personally, I’m all in on the fight for 1.5ºC. It’s not a magic line in the sand, but it’s a lifeline for climate justice.
This is not a “good” scenario. It’s one of profound loss & climate impacts that were totally avoidable if we’d acted in line with the science and cut emissions earlier. I struggle to feel "happy" about it
This is not a “good” scenario. It’s one of profound loss & climate impacts that were totally avoidable if we’d acted in line with the science and cut emissions earlier. I struggle to feel "happy" about it
The good news is that even BECCS/DACCS only scale to 1 GtCO2 by 2050 and never beyond that, we can still get below 1.5ºC pre-2100 (I ran the numbers 🤓)
We’re pushing the CDR frontier, but if we fall short we can still rescue 1.5ºC
The good news is that even BECCS/DACCS only scale to 1 GtCO2 by 2050 and never beyond that, we can still get below 1.5ºC pre-2100 (I ran the numbers 🤓)
We’re pushing the CDR frontier, but if we fall short we can still rescue 1.5ºC
This CDR is not compensating for fossil fuels – which are phased out fully.
The choice of fossil phaseout OR removals was always a dumb one. It’s no longer a choice we have
This CDR is not compensating for fossil fuels – which are phased out fully.
The choice of fossil phaseout OR removals was always a dumb one. It’s no longer a choice we have
Carbon removal is controversial – I get it. I wrote my PhD criticising the over-reliance on CDR in many global scenarios.
But in a world of overshoot, removals are a necessity not a choice. We either accept a radical scale-up of removals, or a radical escalation of climate risks.
Carbon removal is controversial – I get it. I wrote my PhD criticising the over-reliance on CDR in many global scenarios.
But in a world of overshoot, removals are a necessity not a choice. We either accept a radical scale-up of removals, or a radical escalation of climate risks.
Methane is a super pollutant, but it only hangs around in the atmosphere for around ~12 years. That means if we cut methane emissions, then within about a decade, the amount of methane in the air will start falling, and that will help bring temperatures down
Methane is a super pollutant, but it only hangs around in the atmosphere for around ~12 years. That means if we cut methane emissions, then within about a decade, the amount of methane in the air will start falling, and that will help bring temperatures down
Renewable electricity + targeted hydrogen/e-fuels push fossil fuels out of the mix. Not to low levels, but to ZERO.
Sorry Al-Jaber, but you’re wrong 😉 We can, and must, phase out fossil fuels
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Renewable electricity + targeted hydrogen/e-fuels push fossil fuels out of the mix. Not to low levels, but to ZERO.
Sorry Al-Jaber, but you’re wrong 😉 We can, and must, phase out fossil fuels
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
The HPA leans into electrification. Electricity is the future – it’s cheaper, it’s smarter, it’s just fundamentally better than continuing to burn stuff (which is sooooo last century). See @ember-energy.org's great work on this!
Two-thirds of demand comes from electricity by 2050
The HPA leans into electrification. Electricity is the future – it’s cheaper, it’s smarter, it’s just fundamentally better than continuing to burn stuff (which is sooooo last century). See @ember-energy.org's great work on this!
Two-thirds of demand comes from electricity by 2050
But by phasing out fossil fuels, cutting methane & scaling up removals, we can bring temperatures back below 1.5ºC pre-2100.
We can still rescue 1.5ºC!
But by phasing out fossil fuels, cutting methane & scaling up removals, we can bring temperatures back below 1.5ºC pre-2100.
We can still rescue 1.5ºC!
❌ We can no longer halve emissions by 2030.
✅ But we can still cut them by ~20%, or 10 GtCO2e
🏃 Post 2030, we need to play catch-up with the IPCC scenarios to make up on lost time
🎯Net-zero dates are accelerated – with NZ CO2 pre-2050, NZ GHGs ~2060
❌ We can no longer halve emissions by 2030.
✅ But we can still cut them by ~20%, or 10 GtCO2e
🏃 Post 2030, we need to play catch-up with the IPCC scenarios to make up on lost time
🎯Net-zero dates are accelerated – with NZ CO2 pre-2050, NZ GHGs ~2060
✅ Starts from current emissions levels
✅ Tries to minimise overshoot
✅ Does so by focusing on things that actually WORK (renewables + electricity), rather than techno-boondoggles (CCS)
✅ Starts from current emissions levels
✅ Tries to minimise overshoot
✅ Does so by focusing on things that actually WORK (renewables + electricity), rather than techno-boondoggles (CCS)
One problem is the scenarios we’re using to guide action are fast becoming outdated. The last IPCC 1.5ºC scenarios assume emissions fell 25% by 2025, and >40% by 2030. We are WAY off track for this.
One problem is the scenarios we’re using to guide action are fast becoming outdated. The last IPCC 1.5ºC scenarios assume emissions fell 25% by 2025, and >40% by 2030. We are WAY off track for this.
Pragmatic for whom?
Not for small islands. Not for vulnerable ecosystems. Not for the global poor on the frontlines of the crisis.
To accept a world above 1.5ºC is to accept a radically altered world.
Pragmatic for whom?
Not for small islands. Not for vulnerable ecosystems. Not for the global poor on the frontlines of the crisis.
To accept a world above 1.5ºC is to accept a radically altered world.
No – 1.5ºC endures as a legal and ethical imperative as we approach, meet and potentially exceed 1.5ºC. See @joerirogelj.bsky.social's great piece on this: bsky.app/profile/joer...
In a new @science.org Policy Forum we explain how the 1.5°C goal remains a critical legal & ethical benchmark, even as the world nears and may soon exceed 1.5°C of global warming🧵1/
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
No – 1.5ºC endures as a legal and ethical imperative as we approach, meet and potentially exceed 1.5ºC. See @joerirogelj.bsky.social's great piece on this: bsky.app/profile/joer...
Meanwhile, global emissions, rather than falling, are still marching upwards.
www.unep.org/resources/em...
Meanwhile, global emissions, rather than falling, are still marching upwards.
www.unep.org/resources/em...