Quantifying non-CO2 contributions to remaining carbon budgets

Date

2021-10-14

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

2397-3722

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Jenkins S, Cain M, Friedlingstein P, et al., (2021) Quantifying non-CO2 contributions to remaining carbon budgets, npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, Volume 4, October 2021, Article number 47

Abstract

The IPCC Special Report on 1.5 °C concluded that anthropogenic global warming is determined by cumulative anthropogenic CO2 emissions and the non-CO2 radiative forcing level in the decades prior to peak warming. We quantify this using CO2-forcing-equivalent (CO2-fe) emissions. We produce an observationally constrained estimate of the Transient Climate Response to cumulative carbon Emissions (TCRE), giving a 90% confidence interval of 0.26–0.78 °C/TtCO2, implying a remaining total CO2-fe budget from 2020 to 1.5 °C of 350–1040 GtCO2-fe, where non-CO2 forcing changes take up 50 to 300 GtCO2-fe. Using a central non-CO2 forcing estimate, the remaining CO2 budgets are 640, 545, 455 GtCO2 for a 33, 50 or 66% chance of limiting warming to 1.5 °C. We discuss the impact of GMST revisions and the contribution of non-CO2 mitigation to remaining budgets, determining that reporting budgets in CO2-fe for alternative definitions of GMST, displaying CO2 and non-CO2 contributions using a two-dimensional presentation, offers the most transparent approach.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Climate and Earth system modelling, Climate change, Climate-change mitigation

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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Relationships

Supplements

Funder/s