Abstract

ABSTRACTIn principle, many climate policymakers have accepted that large-scale carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is necessary to meet the Paris Agreement’s mitigation targets, but they have avoided proposing by whom CDR might be delivered. Given its role in international climate policy, the European Union (EU) might be expected to lead the way. But among EU climate policymakers so far there is little talk on CDR, let alone action. Here we assess how best to ‘target’ CDR to motivate EU policymakers exploring which CDR target strategy may work best to start dealing with CDR on a meaningful scale. A comprehensive CDR approach would focus on delivering the CDR volumes required from the EU by 2100, approximately at least 50 Gigatonnes (Gt) CO2, according to global model simulations aiming to keep warming below 2°C. A limited CDR approach would focus on an intermediate target to deliver the CDR needed to reach ‘net zero emissions’ (i.e. the gross negative emissions needed to offset residual positive emissions that are too expensive or even impossible to mitigate). We argue that a comprehensive CDR approach may be too intimidating for EU policymakers. A limited CDR approach that only addresses the necessary steps to reach the (intermediate) target of ‘net zero emissions’ is arguably more achievable, since it is a better match to the existing policy paradigm and would allow for a pragmatic phase-in of CDR while avoiding outright resistance by environmental NGOs and the broader public.Key policy insightsMaking CDR an integral part of EU climate policy has the potential to significantly reshape the policy landscape.Burden sharing considerations would probably play a major role, with comprehensive CDR prolonging the disparity and tensions between progressives and laggards.Introducing limited CDR in the context of ‘net zero’ pathways would retain a visible primary focus on decarbonization but acknowledge the need for a significant enhancement of removals via ‘natural’ and/or ‘engineered’ sinks.A decarbonization approach that intends to lead to a low level of ‘residual emissions’ (to be tackled by a pragmatic phase-in of CDR) should be the priority of EU climate policy.

Highlights

  • A decarbonization approach that intends to lead to a low level of ‘residual emissions’ should be the priority of European Union (EU) climate policy

  • This was the result of a broader proposal put forward by the European Parliament in January 2018 which did not lead to any subsequent political debate on carbon dioxide removal (CDR)

  • A comprehensive CDR approach would embrace this challenge by openly acknowledging that the EU would have to reach reduction targets of far more than 100% in the second half of the century to help limit the global temperature increase to no more than 2°C, and that this is only possible with huge amounts of CDR

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Summary

Targeting carbon dioxide removal in the European Union

Citation for published version: Geden, O & Scott, V 2018, 'Targeting carbon dioxide removal in the European Union', Climate Policy.

Climate Policy
OUTLOOK ARTICLE
Key policy insights
Hesitating to accept the need for CDR
Targeting CDR
Comprehensive CDR approach
Findings
Limited CDR approach
Full Text
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