Decarbonising the critical sectors of aviation, shipping, road freight and industry to limit warming to 1.5–2°C

Limiting warming to well below 2°C requires rapid and complete decarbonisation of energy systems. We compare economy-wide modelling of 1.5°C and 2°C scenarios with sector-focused analyses of four critical sectors that are difficult to decarbonise: aviation, shipping, road freight transport, and industry. We develop and apply a novel framework to analyse and track mitigation progress in these sectors. 

We find that emission reductions in the 1.5°C and 2°C scenarios of the IMAGE model come from deep cuts in CO2 intensities and lower energy intensities, with minimal demand reductions in these sectors’ activity.

We identify a range of additional measures and policy levers that are not explicitly captured in modelled scenarios but could contribute significant emission reductions. These are demand reduction options, and include less air travel (aviation), reduced transportation of fossil fuels (shipping), more locally produced goods combined with high load factors (road freight), and a shift to a circular economy (industry).

We discuss the challenges of reducing demand both for economy-wide modelling and for policy. Based on our sectoral analysis framework, we suggest modelling improvements and policy recommendations, calling on the relevant UN agencies to start tracking mitigation progress through monitoring key elements of the framework (CO2 intensity, energy efficiency, and demand for sectoral activity, as well as the underlying drivers), as a matter of urgency.

Authors

PBL Authors
Oreane Edelenbosch David Gernaat Detlef van Vuuren
Other authors
M. Sharmina
C. Wilson
R. Freeman
P. Gilbert
A. Larkin
E. W. Littleton
M. Traut
N. E. Vaughan
F. R. Wood
C. Le Quéré

Specifications

Publication title
Decarbonising the critical sectors of aviation, shipping, road freight and industry to limit warming to 1.5–2°C
Publication date
24 October 2020
Publication type
Artikel
Publication language
Engels
Magazine
Climate Policy
Product number
4310