This paper proposes that a limited use of geoengineering should help meet the goals of the Paris Agreement provided that decarbonization is significantly accelerated beyond the plans included in current National Determined Contributions.
This paper assesses how best to ‘target’ carbon dioxide removal (CDR) to motivate EU policymakers exploring which CDR target strategy may work best to start dealing with CDR on a meaningful scale.
Paul Price, Alwynne McGeever, Mike Jones , Barry McMullin
This report presents a comprehensive review of the existing literature on the potential forms of negative emissions technology (NET), with a particular focus on technology options suitable for deployment in Ireland.
This paper discusses the use of option contracts in carbon dioxide removal (CDR) markets and how they can encourage rapid investment in CDR technology and in operational capacity.
This report brings together experts from the European Academies Science Advisory Council to review the available technologies for carbon dioxide removal and how they frame the EU's position within the Paris Agreement.
R. Stuart Haszeldine, Stephanie Flude, Gareth Johnson, Vivian Scott
This article is part of the theme issue ‘The Paris Agreement: understanding the physical and social challenges for a warming world of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels’.
This thesis analyses the contested politics of including (and accounting for) land-based mitigation in a post-2020 climate agreement, and the consequences for future mitigation pathways over the course of this century.