Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2018)

Negative emissions—Part 2: Costs, potentials and side effects

  • Sabine Fuss,
  • William F Lamb,
  • Max W Callaghan,
  • Jérôme Hilaire,
  • Felix Creutzig,
  • Thorben Amann,
  • Tim Beringer,
  • Wagner de Oliveira Garcia,
  • Jens Hartmann,
  • Tarun Khanna,
  • Gunnar Luderer,
  • Gregory F Nemet,
  • Joeri Rogelj,
  • Pete Smith,
  • José Luis Vicente Vicente,
  • Jennifer Wilcox,
  • Maria del Mar Zamora Dominguez,
  • Jan C Minx

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aabf9f
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 063002

Abstract

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The most recent IPCC assessment has shown an important role for negative emissions technologies (NETs) in limiting global warming to 2 °C cost-effectively. However, a bottom-up, systematic, reproducible, and transparent literature assessment of the different options to remove CO _2 from the atmosphere is currently missing. In part 1 of this three-part review on NETs, we assemble a comprehensive set of the relevant literature so far published, focusing on seven technologies: bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), afforestation and reforestation, direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS), enhanced weathering, ocean fertilisation, biochar, and soil carbon sequestration. In this part, part 2 of the review, we present estimates of costs, potentials, and side-effects for these technologies, and qualify them with the authors’ assessment. Part 3 reviews the innovation and scaling challenges that must be addressed to realise NETs deployment as a viable climate mitigation strategy. Based on a systematic review of the literature, our best estimates for sustainable global NET potentials in 2050 are 0.5–3.6 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for afforestation and reforestation, 0.5–5 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for BECCS, 0.5–2 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for biochar, 2–4 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for enhanced weathering, 0.5–5 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for DACCS, and up to 5 GtCO _2 yr ^−1 for soil carbon sequestration. Costs vary widely across the technologies, as do their permanency and cumulative potentials beyond 2050. It is unlikely that a single NET will be able to sustainably meet the rates of carbon uptake described in integrated assessment pathways consistent with 1.5 °C of global warming.

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