https://www.mdpi.com/2225-1154/10/5/75

The Climate Change Challenge: A Review of the Barriers and Solutions to
Deliver a Paris Solution

Filipe Duarte Santos, Paulo Lopes Ferreira and Jiesper Strandsbjerg Tristan
Pedersen

Abstract
Global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have continued to grow persistently
since 1750. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) entered into force in 1994 to stabilize GHG emissions. Since then,
the increasingly harmful impacts of global climate change and repeated
scientific warnings about future risks have not been enough to change the
emissions trend and enforce policy actions. This paper synthesizes the
climate change challenges and the insofar insufficient mitigation responses
via an integrated literature review. The fossil industry, mainstream
economic thinking, national rather than international interests, and
political strive for short-term interests present key barriers to climate
mitigation. A continuation of such trends is reflected in the Dice model,
leading to a 3.5 °C temperature increase by 2100. Despite receiving the
Nobel Prize for integrating climate change into long-run macroeconomic
analysis via the Dice model, increases in global mean temperatures
overshooting the 1.5 °C to 2 °C Paris targets imply an intensified
disruption in the human–climate system. Past and present policy delays and
climate disruption pave the way for solar radiation management (SRM)
geoengineering solutions with largely unknown and potentially dangerous
side effects. This paper argues against SRM geoengineering and evaluates
critical mitigation solutions leading to a decrease in global temperatures
without overshooting the Paris targets. The essential drivers and barriers
are discussed through a unified approach to tipping points in the
human–climate system. The scientific literature presents many economically
and technologically viable solutions and the policy and measures required
to implement them. The present paper identifies the main barriers to
integrating them in a globally cooperative way, presenting an efficient,
long-term, and ethical policy approach to climate change.

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