ABSTRACT Methane emissions reduction can make an effective contribution to national climate policy objectives in countries with high ratios of methane to carbon dioxide emissions. This paper explores the physical science basis for Irish climate policy targets in a ‘split-gas’ approach i.e. separate targets for CO 2 and methane. Explicit calculations of Ireland's historic and future warming contribution show that the planned phaseout in fossil-CO 2 emissions by 2050, together with relatively modest but sustained falls in methane emissions from agriculture, can lead to early stabilization of Ireland's contribution to global warming. It is proposed that this ‘temperature neutrality’ concept provides a pragmatic framework for aligning national climate policy with Article 2.1(a) of the Paris Agreement in countries with high shares of agricultural methane emissions. National methane reductions required to achieve temperature neutrality by a target year are shown to depend on realized future atmospheric methane concentrations, with lower concentrations requiring stronger national reductions and vice versa.