Research and publications

Optimal Climate Policy with Negative Emissions

We can limit the future temperature impact of climate change in two ways:

  • (i) reducing our use ...

Author(s):

Riccardo Rebonato, Dherminder Kainth, Lionel Melin, Dominic O'Kane

Summary:

We can limit the future temperature impact of climate change in two ways:

  • (i) reducing our use of CO2 emitting fuels as an energy source (abatement), and
  • (ii) using negative emission technologies (NETs) to remove existing CO2 from the atmosphere (removal).

Using a modification of the DICE model, we analyse the optimal use of these two policy responses to climate change. After calibrating the marginal costs of abatement and CO2 removal to the latest scientific information, authors find that carbon removal must play a very important role in an optimal policy. If this policy is followed, we find that the Paris-Agreement 1.5-2 C warming by 2100 target is not just aspirational, but optimal. When an important role is played by NETs to control global warming, the decrease in carbon emissions can be more gradual, reducing transition risk and social dislocations.

The authors examine the impact on the economy of large-scale carbon removal programmes, the potential for moral hazard and the logistic problems associated with the storage of the removed carbon.

 

Keywords: climate change; global warming; negative emissions technologies; integrated assessment models 

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Type : Academic Publication
Date : 04/01/2023