Poster's note:

Some interesting quotes:

"We also do not include mitigation levers associated with carbon dioxide
removal (CDR) options associated with ocean fertilisation, carbon storage
in industrial products (e.g. wooden building materials) and solar radiation
management, owing to their absence from the scenarios studies."

You can check the whole here:
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/abfeec

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All options, not silver bullets, needed to limit global warming to 1.5 °C:
a scenario appraisal

Lila Warszawski, Elmar Kriegler, Timothy M Lenton, Owen Gaffney1, Daniela
Jacob, Daniel Klingenfeld, Ryu Koide, María Máñez Costa, Dirk Messner,
Nebojsa Nakicenovic

Abstract

Climate science provides strong evidence of the necessity of limiting
global warming to 1.5 °C, in line with the Paris Climate Agreement. The
IPCC 1.5 °C special report (SR1.5) presents 414 emissions scenarios
modelled for the report, of which around 50 are classified as '1.5 °C
scenarios', with no or low temperature overshoot. These emission scenarios
differ in their reliance on individual mitigation levers, including
reduction of global energy demand, decarbonisation of energy production,
development of land-management systems, and the pace and scale of deploying
carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies. The reliance of 1.5 °C scenarios
on these levers needs to be critically assessed in light of the potentials
of the relevant technologies and roll-out plans. We use a set of five
parameters to bundle and characterise the mitigation levers employed in the
SR1.5 1.5 °C scenarios. For each of these levers, we draw on the literature
to define 'medium' and 'high' upper bounds that delineate between their
'reasonable', 'challenging' and 'speculative' use by mid century. We do not
find any 1.5 °C scenarios that stay within all medium upper bounds on the
five mitigation levers. Scenarios most frequently 'over use' CDR with
geological storage as a mitigation lever, whilst reductions of energy
demand and carbon intensity of energy production are 'over used' less
frequently. If we allow mitigation levers to be employed up to our high
upper bounds, we are left with 22 of the SR1.5 1.5 °C scenarios with no or
low overshoot. The scenarios that fulfil these criteria are characterised
by greater coverage of the available mitigation levers than those scenarios
that exceed at least one of the high upper bounds. When excluding the two
scenarios that exceed the SR1.5 carbon budget for limiting global warming
to 1.5 °C, this subset of 1.5 °C scenarios shows a range of 15–22 Gt CO2 (16–22
Gt CO2 interquartile range) for emissions in 2030. For the year of reaching
net zero CO2 emissions the range is 2039–2061 (2049–2057 interquartile
range).

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