Journal
ONE EARTH
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 565-583Publisher
CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2021.04.001
Keywords
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Funding
- Swiss National Science Foundation
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The petrochemical sector is crucial in low-carbon technologies development, but contributes significantly to greenhouse gas emissions. By using renewable carbon pathways, emissions can be reduced, but there is a risk of exceeding biodiversity boundaries. The environmental footprint of decarbonization solutions for hard-to-abate sectors needs to be quantified.
The petrochemical sector will play a crucial role in developing low-carbon transition technologies, but the industry also contributes a significant proportion of greenhouse gas emissions. Momentum is building to help reduce the carbon footprint of this hard-to-abate sector, particularly through replacing fossil carbon feed-stocks with carbon from biomass, captured CO2, and other recycled resources, but the broader implications of these so-called solutions'' remain unclear. Here, we assess the overall sustainability of such renewable carbon pathways'' by quantifying their life-cycle environmental footprints with respect to the previously defined nine planetary boundaries. We show that although a shift toward renewable carbon pathways could indeed reduce CO2 emissions by 25% to over 100%, the scenario with the lowest carbon footprint could exceed the biodiversity planetary boundary by at least 30%. Our work highlights the potential pitfalls of overlooking global environmental guardrails beyond greenhouse gas emissions reduction and identifies new avenues for quantifying the environmental footprint of decarbonization solutions for hard-to-abate sectors.
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