The 2050 target

Material Information

Title:
The 2050 target achieving an 80% reduction including emissions from international aviation and shipping
Creator:
Committee on Climate Change
Publication Date:
Language:
English

Notes

Summary:
Our report Scope of carbon budgets: Statutory advice on inclusion of international aviation and shipping concludes that: • Emissions from international aviation and shipping cause warming and therefore must be managed. • The current approach to these sectors lacks legal underpinning and should be formalised in order to remove current uncertainties around the future interpretation of the 2050 target. • Including these sectors in carbon budgets and the 2050 target would be the most transparent, comprehensive and flexible approach. • Potential complexities that we previously identified (relating to design of the EU ETS cap for aviation and the accounting methodology for shipping) no longer exist. In that report, we therefore recommend that international aviation and shipping should now be included in the accounting framework of the Climate Change Act. This technical report supports that advice by showing how an 80% 2050 target can be achieved inclusive of emissions from international aviation and shipping based on currently identified measures and at a cost previously accepted. It builds on previous work in our 2011 Bioenergy Review and in our advice on carbon budgets, adding a new approach and new analysis: • New approach. Instead of using cost-optimising models (as in our previous work) we develop deployment ranges for key abatement measures in each sector based on detailed modelling of technology costs, deployment constraints and interactions within the energy sector, as set out in Chapters 2-6 of this report. We then combine these sectoral deployment levels to create economy-wide scenarios for 2050, identifying how an 80% reduction target including international aviation and shipping can be met when some deployment barriers cannot be overcome, or in the absence of key technologies. • New analysis. We have undertaken detailed new analysis of abatement options to 2050 in the key emitting sectors (e.g. for battery costs for electric vehicles, district heating and electrification in industry). In analysing ways to meet the 2050 target we are not seeking to specify now the precise mix of technologies and/or consumer behaviour change to achieve this target, which would be neither necessary, possible nor desirable. However, it is important to establish that plausible scenarios exist for reaching such a target and to consider their potential costs. Our specific conclusions are: • The 2050 target is stretching and will require action across the economy. There are various ways in which the target could be met based on currently identified measures, all of which require deep emissions cuts through energy efficiency improvements, decarbonisation of power generation, extensive electrification of heat and transport, and prioritised use of scarce bioenergy to reduce (or offset) emissions from applications with few alternative abatement options. There is scope for less than full uptake in one or two – but not all – sectors. Without CCS or with very limited availability of sustainable bioenergy the target becomes far more challenging although it could still be met within the technical abatement potential we identify. Scenarios for international aviation and shipping emissions set out in our statutory advice are feasible and desirable in the context of required reductions across the economy. – All our scenarios involve widespread deployment of energy efficiency measures and decarbonisation of the power sector (through a combination of nuclear, renewables and CCS), with low-carbon electricity used to meet energy demands from heat and surface transport. Significant abatement will also be needed from industry (e.g. through efficiency and CCS), from aviation (e.g. from more efficient planes and moderations to demand growth) and from measures to reduce emissions on farms and in waste disposal. Scarce bioenergy resources should be used where they can reduce emissions most effectively – in sectors where other abatement options are limited and in combination with CCS to generate negative emissions. – Our scenarios demonstrate that the target can still be met if deployment barriers prevent full delivery in some areas. For example, we show scenarios with significant but not full deployment of electric vehicles, with tighter constraints on heat pump applicability, with limited use of CCS in industry, or with stronger demand growth for aviation. – We include sensitivities where CCS is not available as an abatement option and/or where bioenergy availability is limited. These require very deep reductions from other available measures (e.g. electrification in industry), implying increased costs and delivery risks. We therefore reiterate a conclusion from our Bioenergy Review that successful development of CCS and access to bioenergy will be particularly important to achievement of the 2050 target. – Planning assumptions for 2050 aviation emissions at around 2005 levels, and shipping emissions roughly a third below 2010 reported levels, are appropriate in the context of reductions required across the economy. Our estimates of the cost of meeting the 2050 target are towards the low end of those previously accepted by Parliament when the Climate Change Act was legislated (i.e. 1-2% of 2050 GDP). A failure to accept this cost now could result in setting of insufficiently ambitious carbon budgets. These would imply either a weakening of climate ambition or higher costs further out in time (e.g. due to required scrapping of capital, rapid supply chain expansion, or purchase of increasingly expensive offset credits). • The appropriate strategy now is to aim for full deployment of all options to prepare for deep emissions reductions across the economy. Decisions about where to focus effort can then be made as uncertainties over costs and barriers are resolved. This is consistent with the legislated fourth carbon budget and with the Government’s approach as set out in the Carbon Plan. We set out our analysis in detail in five sectoral chapters following this summary, which has six sections: 1. Current emissions and options for abatement 2. Reducing emissions to 2030 3. Achieving an 80% 2050 target including emissions from international aviation and shipping 4. Meeting the 2050 target with limited availability of key options 5. Costs of meeting the 2050 target 6. Summary and implications for policy approach

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Florida International University
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