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Global energy growth is outpacing decarbonization

Robert B. JacksonDepartment of Earth System Science, Woods Institute for the Environment, and Precourt Institute for Energy, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305–2210, United States of AmericaCorinne Le QuéréTyndall CentreRobbie M. AndrewCICERO Center for International Climate Research, PO Box 1129 Blindern, NO-0318 Oslo, NorwayJosep G. CanadellGlobal Carbon Project, CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Canberra, ACT 2601, AustraliaJan Ivar KorsbakkenCICERO Center for International Climate Research, PO Box 1129 Blindern, NO-0318 Oslo, NorwayZhu LiuDeparment of Earth System Science, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, People’s Republic of ChinaGlen P. PetersCICERO Center for International Climate Research, PO Box 1129 Blindern, NO-0318 Oslo, NorwayBo ZhengLaboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement, CEA-CNRS-UVSQ, UMR 8212, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
2018en
ABI

Аннотация

Recent reports have highlighted the challenge of keeping global average temperatures below 2 C and -even more so-1.5 C (IPCC 2018). Fossil-fuel burning and cement production release 90% of all CO 2 emissions from human activities. After a three-year hiatus with stable global emissions (Jackson et al 2016; Le Qur C et al 2018a ; IEA 2018), CO 2 emissions grew by 1.6% in 2017 to 36.2 Gt (billion tonnes), and are expected to grow a further 2.7% in 2018 (range: 1.8%-3.7%) to a record 37.12 Gt CO 2 (Le Qur et al 2018b). Additional increases in 2019 remain uncertain but appear likely because of persistent growth in oil and natural gas use and strong growth projected for the global economy. Coal use has slowed markedly in the last few years, potentially peaking, but its future trajectory remains uncertain. Despite positive progress in 19 countries whose economies have grown over the last decade and their emissions have declined, growth in energy use from fossil-fuel sources is still outpacing the rise of low-carbon sources and activities. A robust global economy, insufficient emission reductions in developed countries, and a need for increased energy use in developing countries where per capita emissions remain far below those of wealthier nations will continue to put upward pressure on CO 2 emissions. Peak emissions will occur only when total fossil CO 2 emissions finally start to decline despite growth in global energy consumption, with fossil energy production replaced by rapidly growing low-or no-carbon technologies.

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