Literature DB >> 34636101

Land-based measures to mitigate climate change: Potential and feasibility by country.

Stephanie Roe1,2, Charlotte Streck2,3, Robert Beach4, Jonah Busch5, Melissa Chapman6, Vassilis Daioglou7,8, Andre Deppermann9, Jonathan Doelman8, Jeremy Emmet-Booth10, Jens Engelmann11, Oliver Fricko9, Chad Frischmann12, Jason Funk13, Giacomo Grassi14, Bronson Griscom5, Petr Havlik9, Steef Hanssen15, Florian Humpenöder16, David Landholm2,16, Guy Lomax17, Johannes Lehmann18, Leah Mesnildrey2,19, Gert-Jan Nabuurs20,21, Alexander Popp16, Charlotte Rivard22, Jonathan Sanderman22, Brent Sohngen23, Pete Smith24, Elke Stehfest8, Dominic Woolf18, Deborah Lawrence1.   

Abstract

Land-based climate mitigation measures have gained significant attention and importance in public and private sector climate policies. Building on previous studies, we refine and update the mitigation potentials for 20 land-based measures in >200 countries and five regions, comparing "bottom-up" sectoral estimates with integrated assessment models (IAMs). We also assess implementation feasibility at the country level. Cost-effective (available up to $100/tCO2 eq) land-based mitigation is 8-13.8 GtCO2 eq yr-1 between 2020 and 2050, with the bottom end of this range representing the IAM median and the upper end representing the sectoral estimate. The cost-effective sectoral estimate is about 40% of available technical potential and is in line with achieving a 1.5°C pathway in 2050. Compared to technical potentials, cost-effective estimates represent a more realistic and actionable target for policy. The cost-effective potential is approximately 50% from forests and other ecosystems, 35% from agriculture, and 15% from demand-side measures. The potential varies sixfold across the five regions assessed (0.75-4.8 GtCO2eq yr-1 ) and the top 15 countries account for about 60% of the global potential. Protection of forests and other ecosystems and demand-side measures present particularly high mitigation efficiency, high provision of co-benefits, and relatively lower costs. The feasibility assessment suggests that governance, economic investment, and socio-cultural conditions influence the likelihood that land-based mitigation potentials are realized. A substantial portion of potential (80%) is in developing countries and LDCs, where feasibility barriers are of greatest concern. Assisting countries to overcome barriers may result in significant quantities of near-term, low-cost mitigation while locally achieving important climate adaptation and development benefits. Opportunities among countries vary widely depending on types of land-based measures available, their potential co-benefits and risks, and their feasibility. Enhanced investments and country-specific plans that accommodate this complexity are urgently needed to realize the large global potential from improved land stewardship.
© 2021 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AFOLU; co-benefits; demand management; feasibility; land management; land sector; mitigation; natural climate solutions; nature-based solutions

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34636101      PMCID: PMC9293189          DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15873

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   13.211


  33 in total

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Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2019-12-14       Impact factor: 13.211

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Authors:  Dominic Woolf; Johannes Lehmann; David R Lee
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Journal:  Glob Change Biol Bioenergy       Date:  2021-12-20       Impact factor: 5.957

2.  Land-based measures to mitigate climate change: Potential and feasibility by country.

Authors:  Stephanie Roe; Charlotte Streck; Robert Beach; Jonah Busch; Melissa Chapman; Vassilis Daioglou; Andre Deppermann; Jonathan Doelman; Jeremy Emmet-Booth; Jens Engelmann; Oliver Fricko; Chad Frischmann; Jason Funk; Giacomo Grassi; Bronson Griscom; Petr Havlik; Steef Hanssen; Florian Humpenöder; David Landholm; Guy Lomax; Johannes Lehmann; Leah Mesnildrey; Gert-Jan Nabuurs; Alexander Popp; Charlotte Rivard; Jonathan Sanderman; Brent Sohngen; Pete Smith; Elke Stehfest; Dominic Woolf; Deborah Lawrence
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2021-10-11       Impact factor: 13.211

3.  The global potential for increased storage of carbon on land.

Authors:  Wayne S Walker; Seth R Gorelik; Susan C Cook-Patton; Alessandro Baccini; Mary K Farina; Kylen K Solvik; Peter W Ellis; Jon Sanderman; Richard A Houghton; Sara M Leavitt; Christopher R Schwalm; Bronson W Griscom
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  8 in total

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