Cumulative carbon emissions budgets consistent with 1.5 °C global warming
Katarzyna B. Tokarska () and
Nathan P. Gillett
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Katarzyna B. Tokarska: University of Victoria
Nathan P. Gillett: University of Victoria
Nature Climate Change, 2018, vol. 8, issue 4, 296-299
Abstract:
Abstract The Paris Agreement 1 commits ratifying parties to pursue efforts to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5 °C relative to pre-industrial levels. Carbon budgets2–5 consistent with remaining below 1.5 °C warming, reported in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5)2,6,8, are directly based on Earth system model (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5) 7 responses, which, on average, warm more than observations in response to historical CO2 emissions and other forcings8,9. These models indicate a median remaining budget of 55 PgC (ref. 10 , base period: year 1870) left to emit from January 2016, the equivalent to approximately five years of emissions at the 2015 rate11,12. Here we calculate warming and carbon budgets relative to the decade 2006–2015, which eliminates model–observation differences in the climate–carbon response over the historical period 9 , and increases the median remaining carbon budget to 208 PgC (33–66% range of 130–255 PgC) from January 2016 (with mean warming of 0.89 °C for 2006–2015 relative to 1861–188013–18). There is little sensitivity to the observational data set used to infer warming that has occurred, and no significant dependence on the choice of emissions scenario. Thus, although limiting median projected global warming to below 1.5 °C is undoubtedly challenging19–21, our results indicate it is not impossible, as might be inferred from the IPCC AR5 carbon budgets2,8.
Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41558-018-0118-9
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