Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2023)

The impact of policy and model uncertainties on emissions projections of the Paris Agreement pledges

  • Michel G J den Elzen,
  • Ioannis Dafnomilis,
  • Andries F Hof,
  • Marika Olsson,
  • Arthur Beusen,
  • W J Wouter Botzen,
  • Takeshi Kuramochi,
  • Leonardo Nascimento,
  • Joeri Rogelj

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/acceb7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 5
p. 054026

Abstract

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Tracking progress towards the Paris Agreement climate goal requires understanding the 2030 emission levels implied by countries’ National Determined Contributions (NDCs). However, key uncertainties and assumptions impact greenhouse gas (GHG) emission projections implied by the NDCs. This study analyses this impact, both globally and for major emitting countries. We find that the assessed uncertainties markedly affect global GHG emission projections. Full achievement of NDC targets is estimated to result in a range of 46–60 GtCO _2 eq by 2030 (median estimate: 53 GtCO _2 eq). The uncertainty in measuring historical emissions, including land-use, as reflected by different datasets is the most important contributing factor. This is followed by two equally important factors globally: socio-economic baseline uncertainty and uncertainty about the emissions implied by current policies in case NDCs are less ambitious than these. Overall, the impact of policy uncertainty (i.e. uncertainty resulting from conditionality of or ranges in NDC targets and uncertainty in emissions resulting from current policies) is about equally important as model/technical uncertainty (i.e. uncertainty in historical emissions and socio-economic baseline variations). This new insight is important for decision makers and researchers because a larger share of the total uncertainty is now attributable to aspects that can be influenced by policy decisions compared to previous analyses of NDC uncertainty.

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