In coping with climate change, China's CO2 mitigation targets should keep in step with the achievement of the long-term goal of holding temperature increase to well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels by the end of this century (this is referred to as the 2 °C goal). Many previous papers have highlighted the implications of different effort-sharing principles and schemes in determining national contributions to global mitigations.
In this paper, China's energy transformation towards the 2 °C goal until 2100 is examined in an integratedassessment model in light of different effort-sharing principles to understand how the application of such schemes may alter China's energy system transformation on a pathway to this long-term goal. Across
scenarios, China's non-fossil energy will account for 50–70% and 85% of primary energy consumption in 2050 and 2100, respectively in the scenarios in this study. Fossil energy with carbon capture and storage technologies and non-fossil energy will dominate power generation in China over the long run. Coal will be
phased out in end-use sectors and electricity use will expand regardless of the effort-sharing principles. The sensitivity analysis of long-term steady-state levels implies that the ultimate level that emissions could reach will have great influences on the energy system transformation in China.
Revised: July 18, 2017 |
Published: April 1, 2017
Citation
Pan X., W. Chen, L.E. Clarke, L. Wang, and L. Guannan. 2017.China's energy system transformation towards the 2 °C goal: Implications of different effort-sharing principles.Energy Policy 103.PNNL-ACT-SA-10244.doi:10.1016/j.enpol.2017.01.020