Decarbonization Prospects in the Commonwealth of Independent States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Exiting Trends in the CIS Based on Statistical Data and Policy Analysis
3.2. Scenario-Based Decarbonization Forecasts
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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EnerBase | EnerBlue | EnerGreen | |
---|---|---|---|
Climate and energy policies | Policies and efforts to mitigate GHG emissions are not compatible with Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) targets | Policies and efforts to mitigate GHG emissions are compatible with NDC objectives | Policies and efforts to mitigate GHG emissions (including NDCs) are in line with Paris Agreement goals |
Energy demand | High demand growth and modest improvements in energy efficiency | Moderate demand growth is compensated by energy efficiency | Significant energy efficiency improvements coupled with the absence of energy demand growth |
Energy supply and prices | Fossil fuels dominate the energy mix and their prices increase, modest renewable additions occur | The share of fossil fuel is slowly decreasing and their prices slowly increase, substantial renewable additions occur | The share of fossil fuel sharply decreases and their prices drop, substantial renewable additions occur |
Carbon intensity *, 2019–2050 | −1.9% | −2.9% | −7.0% |
Energy intensity of GDP ** (final) | −1.4% | −1.9% | −3.3% |
The CIS Member-States | Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDC), 2021 |
---|---|
The Republic of Armenia | By 2030 40% emission reduction from 1990 level. The country will keep its 2050 GHG mitigation—2.07 tCO2eq/capita that was integrated in its Long-Term Low Emission Development Strategy (LT-LEDS). The new 2030 mitigation target is 40% reduction below the 1990 level.) |
The Republic of Azerbaijan | By 2030 the Republic of Azerbaijan aims at 35% GHG emission reduction compared to 1990 level. |
The Republic of Belarus | By 2030 the Republic of Belarus committed to reduce GHG emissions by at least 28% compared to the 1990 level, excluding the Land Use, Land-Use Change, and Forestry sector, and without any additional conditions. |
the Republic of Kazakhstan | By 2030 a 15% reduction in GHG emissions compared to the base year.By 2030 a 25% reduction in GHG emissions compared to the base year, on the condition of international investments, access to green climate funds, low carbon technology transfer, and flexible mechanism for economy in transition. |
The Kyrgyz Republic | Unconditional reduction of GHG emissions by 16.63% by 2025 and by 15.97% by 2030. Should additional international support be rendered, the reductin will make up 36.61% by 2025 and 43.62% by 2030. |
The Republic of Moldova | By 2030 the Republic of Moldova is committed to an unconditional 70% net GHG emissions reduction target as compared to 1990 level. The previous commitment in NDC1 was 64–67%. The reduction target could be increased to 88% compared to 1990 level should access to low-interest financing, technology transfer and technical cooperation be assured. |
The Russian Federation | By 2030 the Russian Federation aims at 70% GHG reduction compared to the 1990 level, consideraing the maximum absorptive capacity of ecosystems (primarily forests) and not t the detriment of the sustainable social and economic development in the country. |
The Republic of Tajikistan | By 2030 the GHG emission reduction in Tajikistan will not exceed 60–70% of the 1990 emission level. Should international funding and technology transfer be provided the reduction will not exceed 50–60% of the 1990 emission level. |
Turkmenistan | By 2030 should financial and technology support be provided, Turkmenistan could achieve zero emission icrease and may even achieve a reduction. |
The Republic of Uzbekistan | By 2030 the Republic of Uzbekistan has increased its commitments and intends to reduce specific GHG emissions per unit of GDP by 35% compared with the 2010 level (in the NDC1 a 10% reduction was specified). |
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Proskuryakova, L.; Ermolenko, G. Decarbonization Prospects in the Commonwealth of Independent States. Energies 2022, 15, 1987. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15061987
Proskuryakova L, Ermolenko G. Decarbonization Prospects in the Commonwealth of Independent States. Energies. 2022; 15(6):1987. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15061987
Chicago/Turabian StyleProskuryakova, Liliana, and Georgy Ermolenko. 2022. "Decarbonization Prospects in the Commonwealth of Independent States" Energies 15, no. 6: 1987. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15061987