Abstract

Energy is crucial for supporting basic human needs, development and well-being. The future evolution of the scale and character of the energy system will be fundamentally shaped by socioeconomic conditions and drivers, available energy resources, technologies of energy supply and transformation, and end-use energy demand. However, because energy-related activities are significant sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and other environmental and social externalities, energy system development will also be influenced by social acceptance and strategic policy choices. All of these uncertainties have important implications for many aspects of economic and environmental sustainability, and climate change in particular. In the Shared-Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) framework these uncertainties are structured into five narratives, arranged according to the challenges to climate change mitigation and adaptation. In this study we explore future energy sector developments across the five SSPs using Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs), and we also provide summary output and analysis for selected scenarios of global emissions mitigation policies. The mitigation challenge strongly corresponds with global baseline energy sector growth over the 21st century, which varies between 40% and 230% depending on final energy consumer behavior, technological improvements, resource availability and policies. The future baseline CO2-emission range is even larger, as the most energy-intensive SSP also incorporates a comparatively high share of carbon-intensive fossil fuels, and vice versa. Inter-regional disparities in the SSPs are consistent with the underlying socioeconomic assumptions; these differences are particularly strong in the SSPs with large adaptation challenges, which have little inter-regional convergence in long-term income and final energy demand levels. The scenarios presented do not include feedbacks of climate change on energy sector development. The energy sector SSPs with and without emissions mitigation policies are introduced and analyzed here in order to contribute to future research in climate sciences, mitigation analysis, and studies on impacts, adaptation and vulnerability.

Highlights

  • The transformation of the energy sector is important in addressing the challenges of both climate change mitigation and adaptation

  • This study introduces and discusses the energy sector results of the Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) quantification of the five Shared Socio-economic Pathways (SSPs) for the baselines and two climate change stabilization levels

  • We discuss the complementary developments of the primary energy supply side (Section 3.2) with a particular focus on the fossil fuel sector

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Summary

Introduction

The transformation of the energy sector is important in addressing the challenges of both climate change mitigation and adaptation. Five key energy sector challenges, to support basic human needs, development and well-being are (i) energy demand growth and its coupling with demographic and economic drivers, (ii) the phasing out of traditional forms of energy use, improving energy access and modernization of energy use in the context of structural economic change, (iii) the expansion of primary energy supplies, (iv) the future of existing and build-up of new energy infrastructures and technologies, and (v) the GHG and other pollutant emissions and their mitigation. These challenges are related to key scientific debates on global and long-term developments in the energy sector.

Methods
The SSP narratives for the energy sector
Results of energy sector pathways
Final energy demand
Primary energy supply
Electricity sector
Energy sector emissions
Full Text
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