Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2018)

Increased importance of methane reduction for a 1.5 degree target

  • William J Collins,
  • Christopher P Webber,
  • Peter M Cox,
  • Chris Huntingford,
  • Jason Lowe,
  • Stephen Sitch,
  • Sarah E Chadburn,
  • Edward Comyn-Platt,
  • Anna B Harper,
  • Garry Hayman,
  • Tom Powell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aab89c
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 054003

Abstract

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To understand the importance of methane on the levels of carbon emission reductions required to achieve temperature goals, a processed-based approach is necessary rather than reliance on the transient climate response to emissions. We show that plausible levels of methane (CH _4 ) mitigation can make a substantial difference to the feasibility of achieving the Paris climate targets through increasing the allowable carbon emissions. This benefit is enhanced by the indirect effects of CH _4 on ozone (O _3 ). Here the differing effects of CH _4 and CO _2 on land carbon storage, including the effects of surface O _3 , lead to an additional increase in the allowable carbon emissions with CH _4 mitigation. We find a simple robust relationship between the change in the 2100 CH _4 concentration and the extra allowable cumulative carbon emissions between now and 2100 (0.27 ± 0.05 GtC per ppb CH _4 ). This relationship is independent of modelled climate sensitivity and precise temperature target, although later mitigation of CH _4 reduces its value and thus methane reduction effectiveness. Up to 12% of this increase in allowable emissions is due to the effect of surface ozone. We conclude early mitigation of CH _4 emissions would significantly increase the feasibility of stabilising global warming below 1.5 °C, alongside having co-benefits for human and ecosystem health.

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