Abstract

ABSTRACT While global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are still rising, a number of countries have emerged with a sustained record of emissions reductions. In this article, we identify these countries and examine their progress, exploring how fast, how deep, and in which sectors they have reduced emissions. We analyse changes in all major GHG emissions sources, with both production – and consumption-based accounting, but exclude very small countries with high volatility, along with land-use, land-use change and forestry CO2 emissions. We find that 24 countries have sustained reductions in annual CO2 and GHG emissions between 1970 and 2018, in total equalling 3.2 GtCO2eq since their respective emissions peaks. In all but three countries, overall GHG reductions are less than energy and industrial CO2 reductions alone. We group countries into three types of emissions pathway: six former Eastern Bloc countries, where emissions declined rapidly in the 1990s and have continued on a downward trajectory since; six Long-term decline countries, which have sustained reductions since the 1970s; and 12 Recent peak countries, whose emissions decline began in the 2000s. In all cases, emissions reductions were achieved primarily in the energy systems sector, specifically in electricity and heat generation, which still remains the largest source of emissions in most countries. By contrast, in the transport sector, emissions tend to be stable or increasing. Transport is the second largest source of current emissions in Recent peak and Long-term decline countries. While the total GHG reductions of these 24 countries are trivial compared to recent global emissions growth, some have achieved a decline of up to 50% in their annual emissions, showing what is possible even under very moderate climate action. Most countries achieved emissions reductions alongside sustained economic growth, and some approached the fast annual rates of change that will be needed across the world in the coming decades to limit warming to 2°C. This raises the hope that more substantive climate policy, as planned in a growing number of countries, may bring about deeper and more rapid emissions reductions than some may expect today. Key policy insights 24 countries have sustained CO2 and GHG emissions reductions between 1970 and 2018 The annual emissions reductions of some countries are within the range of those needed to limit global warming to 2°C, but not consistently, nor across all underlying sectors Most emissions reductions were achieved in the energy sector; transport emissions have remained stable or continue to grow

Highlights

  • Global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have continuously grown, almost uninterrupted, since the start of the industrial revolution (Friedlingstein et al, 2019; Minx et al 2021)

  • We structure our results into four sections, corresponding to our different methods and areas of analysis: (1) the number of countries reducing emissions, their geographic coverage and rates of change; (2) the varying emissions trajectories of decarbonizing countries, grouped into three clusters; (3) the underlying sector changes that led to emissions reductions across countries and clusters; and (4) the comparison of achieved reduction rates over time with future rates expressed in 2°C and 1.5°C scenarios from the literature

  • We find that 24 countries have managed to reduce both CO2 and GHG emissions between 1970 and 2018 (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have continuously grown, almost uninterrupted, since the start of the industrial revolution (Friedlingstein et al, 2019; Minx et al 2021). It remains important not to overstate climate mitigation progress (Lamb et al, 2020), not least because current Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) indicate global emissions growth until 2030, with more than a decade already wasted on limited climate action in the meantime (Höhne et al, 2020). These issues will be the focus of the five-yearly global stocktake mechanism of the Paris Agreement rulebook, where countries evaluate their collective progress towards meeting the Agreement’s goals

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