April 24, 2022
Journal Article

The impact of U.S. re-engagement in climate on the Paris targets

Abstract

The Paris Agreement is meant to bind together international efforts to reduce temperature increase to well-below 2ÂșC. While so far, ambitions in many signatories of the Paris Agreement have been insufficient to achieve this goal, optimism prevailed in the second half of 2020, with several major emitters enhancing their mitigation targets and a change of leadership in the United States (U.S.). Expectations are high for an active re-engagement in climate action by the Biden Administration, which immediately re-entered the Paris Agreement and announced a net-zero goal for 2050. Apart from the impact that U.S. federal re-engagement could have on national greenhouse gas emissions levels, there are several channels through which U.S. re-engagement in climate action could positively impact ambitions in other countries. This Policy Forum explores the impact of renewed U.S. engagement on national emissions, global emissions and end-of-century temperatures by comparing five combinations of climate ambitions in the U.S. and the rest of the world through an integrated assessment model.

Published: April 24, 2022

Citation

Van De Ven D.P., M.I. Westphal, A. Gambhir, G. Peters, H.C. McJeon, N. Hultman, and K. Kennedy, et al. 2021. The impact of U.S. re-engagement in climate on the Paris targets. Earth's Future 9, no. 9:e2021EF002077. PNNL-SA-165167. doi:10.1029/2021EF002077