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1.5°C pathways still achievable, but necessitate equity and climate protection

This synthesis report of the Navigate project presents policy relevant insights on how to achieve a rapid and fair transition to net zero emissions

hand-presenting-earth-sustainaImage: Rawpixel | Freepik

“Only the combination of producer and consumer oriented policies can realise the full emission reduction potential in all sectors,” says Elmar Kriegler from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), co-ordinator of the Navigate project. “Their combined and immediate implementation can substantially accelerate climate action and close the gap to a pathway limiting warming to 1.5°C by 2100.” The results from Navigate also show that re-distributive policies buffer the influence on poor households while allowing them to reap the benefits of avoided climate effects in the long term. This demonstrates that a global net-zero transition done right not only safeguards the climate but also protects against worsening global inequality.

The Navigate report spells out how such transitions play out in the energy, transport, industry, buildings, and agricultural sectors. For example, the modelled rapid industry transition is based on a rapid decarbonisation of electricity generation, strong electrification, an accelerated introduction of clean fuels, increased circularity in carbon-intensive industries like the steel industry, and the deployment of carbon capture and storage, which will cut carbon emissions by 55–90 per cent until 2050. At the same time, income inequality is consistently reduced in 1.5°–2°C mitigation pathways compared to the case of unabated climate change, due to a combination of redistributive policies and the avoided increase in inequality from climate damages.

“Based on the next generation of integrated assessment models, this report shows that a rapid transformation of energy supply and industrial production is crucial for achieving emission neutrality,“ author Jessica Strefler from PIK says. “However, an early transformation of energy consumption reduces emissions, especially in the short term, and the lower energy demand reduces the pressure on the transformation. Advanced land use measures, including technical measures as well as dietary changes and reduced food waste, are crucial to reducing greenhouse gas emissions other than CO2, thus enabling net-zero emissions as well as a lower peak of the global mean temperature well below 2°C.”

The EU-funded Navigate aimed at developing the next generation of advanced IAMs that better describe transformational change and the winners and losers of the transition. IAMs support climate policy making by combining energy, economy, land, water, and climate into a consistent modelling framework to analyse global climate change mitigation  pathways. Navigate critically improved the capabilities of IAMs and increased the usability and transparency of IAM results. The project was co-ordinated by PIK and conducted by 16 research institutions from Europe and two institutions from Brazil and China.


To read full report, click here 
 

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