4.8 Article

National post-2020 greenhouse gas targets and diversity-aware leadership

Journal

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 1098-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/NCLIMATE2826

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship [FT130100809]

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Achieving the collective goal of limiting warming to below 2 degrees C or 1.5 degrees C compared to pre-industrial levels requires a transition towards a fully decarbonized world. Annual greenhouse gas emissions on such a path in 2025 or 2030 can be allocated to individual countries using a variety of allocation schemes. We reanalyse the IPCC literature allocation database and provide country-level details for three approaches. At this stage, however, it seems utopian to assume that the international community will agree on a single allocation scheme. Here, we investigate an approach that involves a major-economy country taking the lead. In a bottom-up manner, other countries then determine what they consider a fair comparable target, for example, either a 'per-capita convergence' or 'equal cumulative per-capita' approach. For example, we find that a 2030 target of 67% below 1990 for the EU28, a 2025 target of 54% below 2005 for the USA or a 2030 target of 32% below 2010 for China could secure a likely chance of meeting the 2 degrees C target in our illustrative default case. Comparing those targets to post-2020 mitigation targets reveals a large gap. No major emitter can at present claim to show the necessary leadership in the concerted effort of avoiding warming of 2 degrees C in a diverse global context.

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