Literature DB >> 34174618

Where is the EU headed given its current climate policy? A stakeholder-driven model inter-comparison.

Alexandros Nikas1, Alessia Elia2, Baptiste Boitier3, Konstantinos Koasidis4, Haris Doukas4, Gabriele Cassetti2, Annela Anger-Kraavi5, Ha Bui6, Lorenza Campagnolo7, Rocco De Miglio2, Elisa Delpiazzo7, Arnaud Fougeyrollas3, Ajay Gambhir8, Maurizio Gargiulo2, Sara Giarola9, Neil Grant8, Adam Hawkes9, Andrea Herbst10, Alexandre C Köberle8, Andrey Kolpakov11, Pierre Le Mouël3, Ben McWilliams12, Shivika Mittal8, Jorge Moreno13, Felix Neuner10, Sigit Perdana14, Glen P Peters15, Patrick Plötz10, Joeri Rogelj16, Ida Sognnæs15, Dirk-Jan Van de Ven13, Marc Vielle14, Georg Zachmann12, Paul Zagamé17, Alessandro Chiodi2.   

Abstract

Recent calls to do climate policy research with, rather than for, stakeholders have been answered in non-modelling science. Notwithstanding progress in modelling literature, however, very little of the scenario space traces back to what stakeholders are ultimately concerned about. With a suite of eleven integrated assessment, energy system and sectoral models, we carry out a model inter-comparison for the EU, the scenario logic and research questions of which have been formulated based on stakeholders' concerns. The output of this process is a scenario framework exploring where the region is headed rather than how to achieve its goals, extrapolating its current policy efforts into the future. We find that Europe is currently on track to overperforming its pre-2020 40% target yet far from its newest ambition of 55% emissions cuts by 2030, as well as looking at a 1.0-2.35 GtCO2 emissions range in 2050. Aside from the importance of transport electrification, deployment levels of carbon capture and storage are found intertwined with deeper emissions cuts and with hydrogen diffusion, with most hydrogen produced post-2040 being blue. Finally, the multi-model exercise has highlighted benefits from deeper decarbonisation in terms of energy security and jobs, and moderate to high renewables-dominated investment needs.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Climate policy; Energy system models; Europe; Integrated assessment models; Model inter-comparison; Stakeholder engagement

Year:  2021        PMID: 34174618     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.148549

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  1 in total

1.  COVID-19 recovery packages can benefit climate targets and clean energy jobs, but scale of impacts and optimal investment portfolios differ among major economies.

Authors:  Dirk-Jan van de Ven; Alexandros Nikas; Konstantinos Koasidis; Aikaterini Forouli; Gabriele Cassetti; Alessandro Chiodi; Maurizio Gargiulo; Sara Giarola; Alexandre C Köberle; Themistoklis Koutsellis; Shivika Mittal; Sigit Perdana; Marc Vielle; Georgios Xexakis; Haris Doukas; Ajay Gambhir
Journal:  One Earth       Date:  2022-09-16
  1 in total

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