2. We know what to do and have the tools to do it
More than a dozen countries have enjoyed a shrinking emissions rate for more than a decade, the panel said, with some seeing 4% annual declines consistent with a 2°C warmer world. There are cost-effective methods of cutting carbon that together could meet half the 2030 emissions target. Solar and wind costs fell 85% and 55% between 2010 and 2019, making them now cheaper than fossil-fuel-powered electricity generation in many places. Carbon-free and low carbon technologies, including nuclear and hydroelectric power, made up 37% of the electricity generated globally in 2019. The report heralds “digitalization” — robotics, AI, the internet of things — as a powerful way to increase energy efficiency and manage renewable power.
3. Carbon removal is “unavoidable” to reach net zero
Keeping to the 1.5°C or even 2°C warming limit will be increasingly difficult without going into what scientists call “overshoot,” or surpassing the limit and then clawing back down. That means carbon removal is “unavoidable” for a path to net-zero emissions, the IPCC said. There are many ways to draw down CO₂. Some of them are tested by hundreds of millions of years of evolution, like halting deforestation and regrowing dense forests. Others are new and increasingly attracting investment, such as direct-air capture that scrapes carbon right out of the air.
To fall back below the 1.5°C target by 2100, the IPCC wrote, practices and policies — many of them still embryonic — would have to draw down almost a decade of CO₂ emissions, according to scenarios that “are subject to increased feasibility concerns.”
4. Behavior matters
Climate scientists use the term mitigation to encompass all the ways that the causes of climate change can be tamped down. For the first time in an IPCC study focusing on these prevention methods, scientists looked at carbon-cutting from the demand side. Scaled behavioral and cultural changes, they found, can wring out 40 to 70% of emissions compared with recent trends. Beef consumption, air travel and building energy use are all areas where the combined decisions of many people can have a substantial impact.
Social science has rarely been a part of the IPCC process, but that changed as authors reviewed 100,000 relevant papers generated in recent years from those disciplines. The new report chapter dovetails with recent analyses quantifying just how much more wealthy people emit than everyone else: The top 1% of emitters are responsible for 70 times more pollution than people in the bottom 50%.
5. Politics shapes the process
Media coverage of IPCC releases tends to focus on what’s called the “summary for policymakers,” a condensed version of the doorstop assessment. Every line of this document must be agreed on by delegates from 195 countries and the scientists who wrote the report. The approval session for the latest report lasted two weeks and was held virtually with hundreds of participants. Wrangling toward the end led to a 40-hour weekend sprint to push the report through the approval process. The IPCC’s work is scientific, but this layer of geopolitics leads to competition over every word, as negotiators to try to embed in final language protections of their own national interests. Although the summary must always reflect the science in the longer report, they don’t always match perfectly.
Sometimes, scientists lay bare a core problem in a way that diplomats never would. Such as when they write: “The interaction between politics, economics and power relationships is central to explaining why broad commitments do not always translate to urgent action.”
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