Managing carbon-intensive materials in a decarbonizing world without a global price on carbon

被引:19
作者
Denis-Ryan, Amandine [1 ]
Bataille, Chris [2 ]
Jotzo, Frank [3 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ, ClimateWorks Australia, Level 16,41 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia
[2] IDDRI, 41 Rue Four, F-75006 Paris, France
[3] Australian Natl Univ, Crawford Sch Publ Policy, JG Crawford Bldg 132, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
关键词
carbon accounting; CO2; allowances; cement industry emissions; GHG reductions; governance; industrial emissions; CLIMATE-CHANGE; CO2; EMISSIONS; STEEL; ENERGY; REDUCTION; ALUMINUM; LEAKAGE; ADJUSTMENT; TARGETS; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1080/14693062.2016.1176008
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Emissions from the production of iron and steel could constitute a significant share of a 2 degrees C global emissions budget (around 19% under the IEA 2DS scenario). They need to be reduced, and this could be difficult under nationally based climate policy approaches. We compare a new set of nationally based modelling (the Deep Decarbonization Pathways Project) with best practice and technical limit benchmarks for iron and steel and cement emissions. We find that 2050 emissions from iron and steel and cement production represent an average 0.28 tCO(2) per capita in nationally based modelling results, very close to the technical limit benchmark of 0.21 tCO(2) per capita, and over 2.5 times lower than the best practice benchmark of 0.72 tCO(2) per capita. This suggests that national projections may be overly optimistic about achievable emissions reductions in the absence of global carbon pricing and an international research and development effort to develop low emissions technologies for emissions-intensive products. We also find that equal per capita emissions targets, often the basis of proposals for how global emissions budgets should be allocated, would be inadequate without global emissions trading. These results show that a nationally based global climate policy framework, as has been confirmed in the Paris Agreement, could lead to risks of overshooting global emissions targets for some countries and carbon leakage. Tailored approaches such as border taxes, sectoral emissions trading or carbon taxes, and consumption-based carbon pricing can help, but each faces difficulties. Ultimately, global efforts are needed to improve technology and material efficiency in emissions-intensive commodities manufacturing and use. Those efforts could be supported by technology standards and a globally coordinated R&D effort, and strengthened by the adoption of global emissions budgets for emissions-intensive traded goods. Policy relevance This article presents new empirical findings on global iron and steel and cement production in a low-carbon world economy, demonstrates the risks associated with a nationally based global climate policy framework as has been confirmed in the Paris Agreement, and analyses policy options to deal with those risks.
引用
收藏
页码:110 / 128
页数:19
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