Climate change mitigation strategies informed by Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) increasingly rely on major deployments of
negative emissions technologies (NETs) to achieve global climate targets. Although NETs can strongly compliment emissions
mitigation efforts, this dependence on the presumed future ability to deploy NETs at scale raises questions about the structural
elements of IAMs that are influencing our understanding of their deployment. Model inter-comparison results underpinning the
IPCC’s special report on Global Warming of 1.5ºC were used to explore the role that current assumptions are having on projections
and the way in which emerging technologies, economic factors, innovation, and tradeoffs between negative emissions objectives
and UN Sustainable Development Goals might have on future deployment of NETs. Current generation IAM scenarios widely assume
we are capable of scaling up NETs over the coming 30 years to achieve negative emissions of the same order of magnitude as
current global emissions (tens of gigatons of CO2/year) predominantly relying on highly land intensive NETs. While the technological
potential of some of these approaches (e.g., direct air capture) is much greater than for the land-based technologies, these are
seldom included in the scenarios. Alternative NETs (e.g., accelerated weathering) are generally excluded because of connections
with industrial sectors or earth system processes that are not yet included in many models. In all cases, modeling results suggest
that significant NET activity will be conducted in developing regions, raising concerns about tradeoffs with UN Sustainable
Development Goals. These findings provide insight into how to improve treatment of NETs in IAMs to better inform international
climate policy discussions. We emphasize the need to better understand relative strength and weaknesses of full suite of NETs that
can help inform the decision making for policy makers and stakeholders.
Published: March 11, 2021
Citation
Fuhrman J., H.C. McJeon, S. Doney, W. Shobe, and A.F. Clarens. 2019.Why Integrated Assessment Modeling of Negative Emissions Technologies Is Hard and How We Can Do Better.Frontiers in Climate 1.PNNL-ACT-SA-10465.doi:10.3389/fclim.2019.00011