Iran Daily

Green electricit­y not enough to curb global warming

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The adoption of clean energies to power electric grids won’t be sufficient to meet the Paris climate targets establishe­d by the UN.

According to new research published in the journal Nature Climate Change, the continued use of fossil fuels for a variety of industrial processes, to power vehicles and heat buildings, is likely to push CO emissions beyond manageable levels, UPI wrote.

Shinichiro Fujimori, researcher from the National Institute for Environmen­tal Studies and Kyoto University in Japan, said, “We focused on the role of fossil fuel emissions that originate in industries like cement or steel making, fuel our transport sector from cars to freight to aviation and goes into heating our buildings.

“These sectors are much more difficult to decarboniz­e than our energy supply, as there are no such obvious options available as wind and solar electricit­y generation.”

According to Fujimori and his colleagues, green transporta­tion is essential to meeting CO2 emissions targets.

The Paris agreement called on nations to progressiv­ely curtail CO2 emissions in order to limit global warming to 1.5°C.

To meet this target, scientists suggest no more than 200 gigatons of CO2 can be released between now and 2100. If current fossil fuel-use trends continue, however, 4,000 gigatons of CO2 will have been emitted by the end of the century.

Authors of the new study argue that relying on carbon capture and storage technologi­es is a dangerous strategy.

Pulling carbon from the atmosphere is likely a necessity, scientists admit, but major industries, including the transporta­tion industry, must also end their use of fossil fuels.

Researcher­s argue that climate pledges made by individual countries must be strengthen­ed sooner rather than later in order to prevent continued investment­s in fossil fuel infrastruc­ture, investment­s that lock in continued CO2 emissions.

Elmar Kriegler, a scientist at the Potsdam-institute for Climate Impact Research, said, “Climate mitigation might be a complex challenge, but it boils down to quite simple math in the end: If the Paris targets are to be met, future CO2 emissions have to be kept within a finite budget.

“The more the budget is overrun, the more relevant will carbon dioxide removal technologi­es become, and those come with great uncertaint­ies.”

According to Krieglar, the precise CO2 budget may be difficult to calculate but the solution to the threat of global warming is clear.

 ??  ?? UPI Even if electric grids go 100 percent green, the fossil fuels used by transporta­tion industries and other industrial processes are likely to jeopardize the climate targets set by the Paris agreement.
UPI Even if electric grids go 100 percent green, the fossil fuels used by transporta­tion industries and other industrial processes are likely to jeopardize the climate targets set by the Paris agreement.

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