Scientist studying climate & energy and lover of disc sports. Senior Research Scholar at @IIASAVienna. Scientific Advisor at @CA_latest. Views are my own.
🚨Our new paper is out in @Nature! 🚨
We assess how key global mitigation benchmarks shift after aligning pathways assessed by the @IPCC_CH to LULUCF accounting conventions used by parties to the #ParisAgreement.
Open access and available at: https://t.co/1cEXV5SlHF
New study by @gauravganti and co-authors shows that for 1.5°C pathways, 90% of the mitigation between 2020 and 2030 will come from emissions reductions:
💨70% CO2 emission cuts
💭20% non-CO2 emission cuts
🌲10% land-based CO2 removals (e.g. afforestation)
https://t.co/rq1YPBIRPt
On 9-11 July, the IPCC held a Meeting on 'Reconciling Land Use Emissions' at #JRC, with >100 participants from 48 countries, including many world's leading experts in carbon modelling, Earth Observation, and national inventories.
Why land use emissions need to be reconciled?
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@RobertHoglund@giac_grassi From the abstract “Our results are important for the Global Stocktake, suggesting that nations will need to increase the collective ambition of their climate targets to remain consistent with the global temperature goals.”
We go in more depth in the paper, worth a read!
@RobertHoglund We estimate the difference between accounting metrics to be 4-7 Gt CO2, like others (@giac_grassi’s many papers on the subject). This value reduces if CO2 emissions globally are lowered (Fig 2C https://t.co/EoyB753YoP). And of course countries need to go to nz in line with ipcc.
@RobertHoglund Certainly not. We estimate new net zero dates for the same pathways including the fertilization effect and find 1.5C pathways would reach “NGHGI net zero” up to 5 years earlier than IPCC benchmarks.
The key point is fert effect goes down with mitigation
@RobertHoglund@RobertPietzcker@marinavitullo1 As @brunncy mentioned in another thread, we did a deep dive looking into the implications of different accounting conventions for future mitigation benchmarks: https://t.co/1cEXV5RNS7
What's the status of #CDR development? What's the gap between #CDR plans vs. the #Paris-consistent emissions scenarios?
Read the #StateofCDR report - and then visit the #DataPortal to dive into the numbers!
Powered by the @IIASAVienna#ScenarioServices.
https://t.co/Se2KN4hOuV
The long-awaited and most comprehensive report on #CarbonRemoval is out!
The State of #CDR - Edition 2.
With 222 pages full of detailed analysis and overview, it is double the length compared to the first volume.
It offers much-needed clarity on terminology, incl sinks, pools, and durability.
For the first time, we see an extensive overview of funding, incl for research & innovation, and in start-ups.
We learn that today, VCMs play a larger role in financing novel CDR than conventional CDR. Credits issued for afforestation/reforestation represent less than 1% of the total afforestation/reforestation CDR that occurred in 2023.
By contrast, pre-purchases for novel CDR well exceeded the total amount removed through novel methods in 2023.
The report is heavy on voluntary #carbonmarkets content - something that makes perfect sense today, as the #VCM has helped drive a lot of the innovation. It will continue to play that role (driving experimental solutions), whilst more mature removal activities will eventually be included in compliance markets.
However, as VCM won't be anywhere enough to scale removals to needed levels, I hope that there will also be other more impactful (policy) tools being used by the time the next edition of the report is published.
The challenge is that policymaking is a slow process, and whilst there have been a lot of developments since the first edition came out 1.5 years ago, we are still far from having extensive governance and policy frameworks for CDR.
The ongoing confusion around interpreting and defining residual emission doesn't help.
And we see an updated CDR gap. Yes, it's still there and still substantial.
The work is cut out for all stakeholders to help make progress on scaling removals, and the State of CDR Report is an impressive resource to rely on going forward.
Explore it here:
https://t.co/JR2RgJHQ8T
Thanks to everyone involved!
The next edition of the #StateofCDR is out tomorrow! We have new #opendata and novel #scenario analysis exploring what levels of #CDR are needed to sustainably achieve the #ParisAgreement.
Join us for the webinar 👉 https://t.co/JtbmUaFyNO
At @EIAgov, we’ve just released our National Energy Modeling System (NEMS) – used to produce the Annual Energy Outlook – as an open source product, with additional EIA code to follow.
https://t.co/wgVOWXydyL
New led by @lamb_wf: the “CDR GAP” @NatureClimate
Gap = CDR in Paris scenarios - CDR in national proposals
Gap in 2050 is 0.5 to 5.5 GT CO2 per year
Rapid emissions reductions necessary regardless of how much CDR
Updates in https://t.co/CsnNAoYkzC 2024 coming on June 4
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New paper led by @energymorgan on feasibility of scaling up direct air capture of CO2
@PNASNews
Uses previous tech —> Global Change Analysis Model (GCAM)
Result: the feasibility space is large,
DACCS meaningful for net-zero…if it grows like some analogs, not if like others
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OUT NOW! Our new study on the many benefitial effect of changing dietary choices towards less meat, less processed food and higher share of unsaturated fats. Result: Big synergies between private health and global climate benefits.
https://t.co/8oILvNEBOf
Conventional #carbonremoval on land will need to increase. And novel #CDR will need to increase A LOT.
A reminder from the 2023 #StateofCDR report. I hear the next version will come out in mid-2024. Looking forward to it!
For deciphering the visual:
Conventional CDR on land is conventional management of land, primarily via afforestation and reforestation.
Novel CDR includes #BECCS, #DACCS, biochar and other novel methods.
https://t.co/yJRnAr5PYT
The EU has agreed on the world's first #carbonremoval certification framework!
𝗦𝗰𝗼𝗽𝗲
There will be four types of units:
• Permanent carbon removal
• Temporary carbon storage in long-lasting products (at least 35 years)
• Temporary carbon storage from carbon farming
• Soil emission reduction from carbon farming
So, emission reductions ended up in the scope of the framework after all.
The geographical scope of the activities is limited to the EU. A potential future review might consider allowing geological carbon storage in neighbouring third countries.
Enhanced hydrocarbon recovery from permanent carbon removal activities is excluded.
Activities and operators in the marine environments are included.
𝗨𝘀𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝘂𝗻𝗶𝘁𝘀
Certified units can only be used for the EU’s climate objectives and NDC, and should not contribute to third countries’ NDCs and international compliance schemes. (Possibly up for a revision in 2026)
I find this puzzling, given that plenty of engineered/industrial CDR methods that rely on CRCF to provide a business case are not within the scope of the EU's climate targets /NDC. Curious to see the final text.
𝗥𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗿𝘆
An EU-wide registry will be developed in four years from the adoption of the regulation. Meanwhile, public registries based on automated and interoperable systems will be used.
𝗠𝗲𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗱𝗼𝗹𝗼𝗴𝗶𝗲𝘀
The Commission's expert group on carbon removal has been waiting for the agreement on the framework so it can start preparing the methodologies.
• Which #CDR methods will have the methodologies prepared first?
• How long will it take?
• Will there still be one methodology per CDR method, or will the approach change?
We will find out over the coming months. The next expert group meeting will take place on 15-17 April.
𝗪𝗵𝗲𝗻 𝘄𝗶𝗹𝗹 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗖𝗥𝗖𝗙 𝗯𝗲 𝗳𝘂𝗹𝗹𝘆 𝗼𝗽𝗲𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹?
Once the following conditions are met:
(1) the regulation is adopted, and
(2) the Commission has adopted the first certification methodology, and
(3) recognised the first certification scheme.
So, the earliest in 2025, possibly in 2026.
This provisional agreement still needs to be endorsed by the Council of the EU, and the European Parliament. In practice, such agreements are almost always endorsed.
Read the press release:
https://t.co/IGoJGFeu8V
Surprised to read this in the Nature editorial on CCS in the EU: "There is not a [..] system for governing and regulating the technology".
The CCS Directive has been in place since 2009.. - it's carbon removal for which the EU has no proper governance (like all other countries).
After 20 wonderful years at EPA, I'm excited to announce that I am taking on a new challenge as Director of the Joint Global Change Research Institute! https://t.co/Tn7r1mJFea