Towards Indicators for a Negative Emissions Climate Stabilisation Index: Problems and Prospects
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background, Materials, and Methods
2.1. Negative Emissions Technologies
Negative Emissions Technology | Removal Process | Capture Medium | Storage (Time; Location) |
---|---|---|---|
Re-/afforestation | Photosynthesis | Land biomass | Temporary; increased carbon stock |
Harvested wood products | |||
Soil carbon sequestration | Land or marine biomass | ||
Biochar | |||
BECCS | Long-lasting; geological | ||
Ocean fertilisation | Marine biomass | Temporary to long-lasting; minerals (land) and sediments, or calcification (oceans) | |
Enhanced weathering | Chemical | Silicate/carbonate rocks | |
DACCS | Amines or carbonation | Long-lasting; geological |
2.2. Method: Narrative Review
Designing Value Indexes
3. Results: Indicators of NET Values for Climate Stabilisation Objectives
3.1. Effectiveness
3.1.1. Global Cooling Potentials
3.1.2. Removal Inertia, Storage Decay, and Storage Maintenance Requirements
3.1.3. Changed Albedo
3.1.4. Change in Direct and Indirect Fluxes of Greenhouse Gases
3.2. Efficiency
3.2.1. Energy Efficiency
3.2.2. Resource Intensity (Land, Water, and Nutrients)
3.2.3. Cost
3.3. Scale
3.3.1. Capture and Storage Potentials
3.3.2. Non-Rivalrous, Complementary Negative Emissions
3.3.3. Technical Integration
3.3.4. Juridical Compatibility
3.3.5. Market Compatibility
3.3.6. Acceptance
3.4. Risk
3.4.1. Diagnostic and Prognostic Uncertainty
3.4.2. Investment Risks
3.4.3. Climate System Tipping Points
3.5. Synergies
4. Discussion: Designing a Negative Emissions Value Index
5. Conclusions
- Immediate reduction in emissions provides more certainty than reliance on future negative emissions. While it is clear that both a reduction in emissions and negative emissions are needed to reach the Paris Agreement’s temperature objectives, the potential for future negative emissions should not motivate postponing conventional mitigation.
- The relatively lower global cooling potential of delayed negative emissions compared to near-term negative emissions, and the benefits of limiting temperature overshoot, indicate that the sooner negative emissions are deployed the better. While research and development of less mature NETs with high potential is a key concern, it is critical to also reap possibilities for the deployment of more mature NETs in the near term, even if their abatement potential is limited.
- The scale and location of the deployment of NETs often determine whether synergies with other objectives are positive or negative. Identifying and showcasing co-benefits additionally drive NET deployment on existing markets and contribute to building new businesses around values that can be sold on premium markets. Concurrently, limiting negative emissions due to harmful synergies may provide false assurances. Negative synergies triggered by the deployment of NETs must be weighed against the negative impacts of climate change.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Component | Indicator | Climate Stabilisation Value |
---|---|---|
Effectiveness | Global cooling potential | Positive value is inversely proportional to time from present until deployment. |
Removal inertia | Positive value is proportional to the speed of the carbon removal function. | |
Storage decay | Positive value is inversely proportional to storage decay rates. | |
Storage maintenance requirements | Positive value is inversely proportional to maintenance requirements, exposure, and sensitivity of the stored carbon. | |
Albedo change | Value is proportional to albedo change caused by a NET. | |
Direct emissions | Value is inversely proportional to the direct emission of greenhouse gases caused by the deployment of the NET. | |
Indirect emissions | Value is inversely proportional to indirect emissions caused by the deployment of the NET. | |
Efficiency | Energy efficiency | Positive value is inversely proportional to the energy requirement per unit of stored carbon. |
Resource intensity | Positive value is inversely proportional to the: | |
land area and quality required per unit of stored carbon, | ||
water required per unit of stored carbon, | ||
Phosphorus, nitrogen, and potassium required per unit of stored carbon. | ||
Cost | Positive value is inversely proportional to the cost per unit of stored carbon. | |
Scale | Technical potential | Positive value is proportional to the potential deployment scale of carbon removal from the atmosphere. |
Storage capacity | Positive value is proportional to storage capacity. | |
Non-rivalrous | Positive value is proportional to the ability to deploy a NET without competing with other NETs. | |
Technical integration | Positive value is proportional to the ability to integrate a NET into existing technical systems. | |
Juridical compatibility | Positive value is proportional to the compatibility of a NET with existing juridical and administrative systems. | |
Market compatibility | Value is proportional to the difference between specific costs of a NET and its capacity to raise revenues on existing markets. | |
Acceptance | Positive value is proportional to the level of acceptance of a NET. | |
Risk | Diagnostic and prognostic uncertainty | Positive value is proportional to the level of (biophysical) certainty of delivery of negative emissions. |
Investment risks, technical failure | Positive value is inversely proportional to the risk of technical failure. | |
Tipping points | Value is dependent on the timing of negative emissions relative to the global temperature peak, with more value for pre-peak than post-peak negative emissions. | |
Synergies | Multiple relevant indicators available | Value is proportional to positive and negative synergies with other policy objectives. |
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Fridahl, M.; Hansson, A.; Haikola, S. Towards Indicators for a Negative Emissions Climate Stabilisation Index: Problems and Prospects. Climate 2020, 8, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli8060075
Fridahl M, Hansson A, Haikola S. Towards Indicators for a Negative Emissions Climate Stabilisation Index: Problems and Prospects. Climate. 2020; 8(6):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli8060075
Chicago/Turabian StyleFridahl, Mathias, Anders Hansson, and Simon Haikola. 2020. "Towards Indicators for a Negative Emissions Climate Stabilisation Index: Problems and Prospects" Climate 8, no. 6: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli8060075
APA StyleFridahl, M., Hansson, A., & Haikola, S. (2020). Towards Indicators for a Negative Emissions Climate Stabilisation Index: Problems and Prospects. Climate, 8(6), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli8060075