December 18, 2020
Journal Article

The Energy Modeling Forum (EMF)-30 Study on Short-Lived Climate Forcers: Introduction and Overview

Abstract

The Energy Modeling Forum (EMF)-30 inter-comparison study on short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs) focuses on black carbon (BC) and methane, two of the most important warming SLCFs. The potential impact on climate change of methane and BC-focused emission reductions in the transport and residential sectors were quantified using nine integrated assessment models and a simple climate model. These SLCF reductions reduced global temperatures by 0.18–0.26 °C in 2050 across the models for central climate parameters, with methane being the dominant contributor. The incremental impact of SLCF-focused reductions is much smaller when combined with a broader climate policy. Individual modeling groups examined the health benefits of air pollutant reductions, climate policy co-benefits, and quantified market impacts from air pollutant damages. Model structure and set-up impact on results are discussed along with areas for future work.

Revised: December 21, 2020 | Published: December 18, 2020

Citation

Smith S.J., Z. Klimont, L. Drouet, M. Harmsen, G. Luderer, K. Riahi, and D. Van Vuuren, et al. 2020. The Energy Modeling Forum (EMF)-30 Study on Short-Lived Climate Forcers: Introduction and Overview. Climatic Change 163, no. 3:1399–1408. PNNL-SA-157391. doi:10.1007/s10584-020-02938-5