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7,700 | AR6_WGIII | 754 | 21 | The theoretical global geologic storage potential is about 10,000 GtCO 2, with more than 80% of this capacity existing in saline aquifers | medium | 1 | train |
7,701 | AR6_WGIII | 754 | 42 | CO2 utilisation (CCU) – instead of geologic storage – could present an alternative method of decarbonisation | high | 2 | train |
7,702 | AR6_WGIII | 755 | 16 | Existing post-combustion approaches relying on absorption are technologically ready for full-scale deployment | high | 2 | train |
7,703 | AR6_WGIII | 755 | 31 | CO2 capture costs present a key challenge, remaining higher than USD50 tCO 2–1 for most technologies and regions; novel technologies could help reduce some costs | high | 2 | train |
7,704 | AR6_WGIII | 755 | 37 | The potential for such reductions is limited in several regions due to low sink availability, but it could jump-start initial investments | medium | 1 | train |
7,705 | AR6_WGIII | 756 | 17 | Because CCS always adds cost, policy instruments are required for it to be widely deployed | high | 2 | train |
7,706 | AR6_WGIII | 756 | 28 | Its long-term role in low-carbon energy systems is therefore uncertain | high | 2 | train |
7,707 | AR6_WGIII | 758 | 11 | Several technological and institutional barriers exist for large-scale BECCS implementation, including large energy requirements for CCS, limit and cost of biomass supply and geologic sinks for CO 2 in several regions, and cost of CO 2 capture technologies | high | 2 | train |
7,708 | AR6_WGIII | 759 | 59 | Fossil fuel reserves have continued to rise because of advanced exploration and utilisation techniques | high | 2 | train |
7,709 | AR6_WGIII | 759 | 60 | A fraction of these available reserves can be used consistent with mitigation goals when paired with CCS opportunities in close geographical proximity | high | 2 | train |
7,710 | AR6_WGIII | 760 | 36 | The cost of producing electricity from fossil sources has remained roughly the same with some regional exceptions while the costs of producing transport fuels has gone down significantly | high | 2 | train |
7,711 | AR6_WGIII | 760 | 49 | Owing to climate constraints, these may become stranded, causing considerable economic impacts | high | 2 | train |
7,712 | AR6_WGIII | 761 | 4 | Oil and coal consistently rank among the least preferred energy sources in many countries | high | 2 | train |
7,713 | AR6_WGIII | 761 | 26 | The geophysical potential of geothermal resources is 1.3 to 13 times the global electricity demand in 2019 | medium | 1 | train |
7,714 | AR6_WGIII | 762 | 16 | Public awareness and knowledge of geothermal energy is relatively low | high | 2 | train |
7,715 | AR6_WGIII | 762 | 17 | Geothermal energy is evaluated as less acceptable than other renewable energy sources such as solar and wind, but is preferred over fossil and nuclear energy, and in some studies, over hydroelectric energy | high | 2 | train |
7,716 | AR6_WGIII | 764 | 4 | Rather than incremental planning, strategic energy system planning can help minimise long-term mitigation costs | high | 2 | train |
7,717 | AR6_WGIII | 766 | 13 | No single, sufficiently mature energy storage technology can provide all the required grid services – a portfolio of complementary technologies working together can provide the optimum solution | high | 2 | train |
7,718 | AR6_WGIII | 768 | 47 | TES can be much cheaper than batteries and has the unique ability to capture and reuse waste heat and cold, enabling the efficiency of many industrial, buildings, and domestic processes to be greatly improved | high | 2 | train |
7,719 | AR6_WGIII | 770 | 17 | At present hydrogen has limited applications – mainly being produced onsite for the creation of methanol and ammonia (IEA 2019c), as well as in refineries.Low- or zero-carbon produced hydrogen is not currently competitive for large-scale applications, but it is likely to have a significant role in future energy systems, due to its wide-range of applications | high | 2 | train |
7,720 | AR6_WGIII | 774 | 21 | Contextual factors, such as physical and climate conditions, infrastructure, available technology, regulations, institutions, culture, and financial conditions define the costs and benefits of mitigation options that enable or inhibit their adoption | high | 2 | train |
7,721 | AR6_WGIII | 779 | 1 | However, globally climate change impacts on electricity generation – including hydro, wind and solar power potentials – should not compromise climate mitigation strategies | high | 2 | train |
7,722 | AR6_WGIII | 779 | 10 | Areas with decreased runoff are anticipated to experience reduced hydropower production and increased water conflict among different economic activities | high | 2 | train |
7,723 | AR6_WGIII | 780 | 14 | Changing wind variability may have a small-to-modest impact on backup energy and storage needs | low | 0 | test |
7,724 | AR6_WGIII | 781 | 13 | Climate change will shift the suitable range for bioenergy towards higher latitudes, but the net change in the total suitable area is uncertain | high | 2 | train |
7,725 | AR6_WGIII | 781 | 24 | The effect of climate change on bioenergy crop yields will increase in high latitudes | low | 0 | test |
7,726 | AR6_WGIII | 782 | 1 | Peak load may increase more than energy consumption, and the changing spatial and temporal load patterns can impact transmission and needs for storage, demands- side management, and peak-generating capacity | high | 2 | train |
7,727 | AR6_WGIII | 783 | 38 | Their environmental impacts of renewable energy production are mostly confined to areas close to the production sources and have been shown to be trivial compared to the mitigation benefits of renewable energy | high | 2 | train |
7,728 | AR6_WGIII | 785 | 36 | High-fidelity models and analyses are needed to assess the economic and environmental characteristics and the feasibility of many aspects of net-zero or net-negative emissions energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,729 | AR6_WGIII | 785 | 43 | Configurations of net-zero energy systems will vary by region but are likely to share several common characteristics | high | 2 | train |
7,730 | AR6_WGIII | 785 | 46 | The precise quantity of fossil fuels will largely depend on the relative costs of such fuels, electrification, alternative fuels, and CDR (Section 6.6.2.4) in the energy system | high | 2 | train |
7,731 | AR6_WGIII | 785 | 60 | There is considerable flexibility regarding the overall quantity of liquid and gaseous fuels that will be required in net-zero energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,732 | AR6_WGIII | 787 | 4 | There are many possible configurations and technologies for zero- or net- negative-emissions electricity systems | high | 2 | train |
7,733 | AR6_WGIII | 787 | 17 | Based on their increasing economic competitiveness, VRE technologies, especially wind and solar power, will likely comprise large shares of many regional generation mixes | high | 2 | train |
7,734 | AR6_WGIII | 787 | 42 | Energy storage will be increasingly important in net-zero energy systems, especially in systems with shares of VRE | high | 2 | train |
7,735 | AR6_WGIII | 788 | 11 | It is technically feasible to use very high renewable shares (e.g., above 75% of annual regional generation) to meet hourly electricity demand under a range of conditions, especially when VRE options, notably wind and solar, are complemented by other resources | high | 2 | train |
7,736 | AR6_WGIII | 789 | 15 | Several end uses, such as passenger transportation (light-duty electric vehicles, two and three wheelers, buses, rail) as well as building energy uses (lighting, cooling) are likely to be electrified in net- zero energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,737 | AR6_WGIII | 789 | 24 | Regions endowed with cheap and plentiful low-carbon electricity resources (wind, solar, hydropower) are likely to emphasise electrification, while those with substantial bioenergy resources or availability of other liquid fuels might put less emphasis on electrification, particularly in hard-to-electrify end uses | medium | 1 | train |
7,738 | AR6_WGIII | 789 | 28 | Electrification of most buildings services, with the possible exception of space heating in extreme climates, is expected in net-zero energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,739 | AR6_WGIII | 789 | 37 | Energy systems that are 100% renewable (including all parts of the energy sector, and not only electricity generation) raise a range of technological, regulatory, market, and operational challenges that make their competitiveness uncertain | high | 2 | train |
7,740 | AR6_WGIII | 790 | 7 | A significant share of transportation, especially road transportation, is expected to be electrified in net-zero energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,741 | AR6_WGIII | 790 | 8 | In road transportation, two- and three-wheelers, light-duty vehicles (LDVs), and buses, are especially amenable to electrification, with more than half of passenger LDVs expected to be electrified globally in net-zero energy systems | medium | 1 | train |
7,742 | AR6_WGIII | 790 | 24 | A non-trivial number of industry applications could be electrified as a part of a net-zero energy system, but direct electrification of heavy industry applications such as cement, primary steel manufacturing, and chemical feedstocks is expected to be challenging | medium | 1 | train |
7,743 | AR6_WGIII | 790 | 67 | Costs are the main barrier to synthesis of net-zero emissions fuels | high | 2 | train |
7,744 | AR6_WGIII | 792 | 2 | Net-zero energy systems will use energy more efficiently than those of today | high | 2 | train |
7,745 | AR6_WGIII | 792 | 9 | Characterising efficiency of net-zero energy systems is problematic due to measurement challenges | high | 2 | train |
7,746 | AR6_WGIII | 793 | 5 | Measurement issues notwithstanding, virtually all studies that address net-zero energy systems assume improved energy intensity in the future | high | 2 | train |
7,747 | AR6_WGIII | 793 | 13 | Net-zero energy systems will be characterised by greater efficiency and more efficient use of energy across all sectors | high | 2 | train |
7,748 | AR6_WGIII | 793 | 34 | Carbon-neutral energy systems are likely to be more interconnected than those of today | high | 2 | train |
7,749 | AR6_WGIII | 798 | 10 | Warming cannot be limited to well below 2°C without rapid and deep reductions in energy system GHG emissions | high | 2 | train |
7,750 | AR6_WGIII | 800 | 10 | To decarbonise most cost- effectively, global net CO 2 emissions from electricity generation will likely reach zero before the rest of the energy sector | medium | 1 | train |
7,751 | AR6_WGIII | 801 | 10 | Limiting warming to well below 2°C requires a rapid and dramatic increase in energy produced from low- or zero-carbon sources | high | 2 | train |
7,752 | AR6_WGIII | 801 | 14 | Low- and zero-carbon sources produce 97–99% of global electricity in 2050 in scenarios limiting warming to 1.5°C (>50%) with no or limited overshoot and 93–97% in scenarios limiting warming to 2°C (>67%) (Figure 6.29) | medium | 1 | train |
7,753 | AR6_WGIII | 809 | 10 | Strong path dependencies, even in early formative stages, can have lasting impacts on energy systems, producing inertia that cuts across technological, economic, institutional and political dimensions | high | 2 | train |
7,754 | AR6_WGIII | 810 | 1 | These current investments combined with emissions from proposed fossil infrastructure exceed the emissions required to limit warming to 1.5°C | medium | 1 | train |
7,755 | AR6_WGIII | 810 | 39 | Existing policies and the NDCs are insufficient to prevent an increase in fossil infrastructure and associated carbon lock-in | high | 2 | train |
7,756 | AR6_WGIII | 810 | 58 | Past and present energy sector investments have created technological, institutional, and behavioural path dependencies aligned towards coal, oil, and natural gas | high | 2 | train |
7,757 | AR6_WGIII | 811 | 3 | Box 6.13 | Stranded Assets Limiting warming to 2°C (>67%) or lower will result in stranded assets | high | 2 | train |
7,758 | AR6_WGIII | 811 | 16 | About 200 GW of fossil fuel electricity generation per year will likely need to be retired prematurely after 2030 to limit warming to 2°C, even if countries achieve their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) | medium | 1 | train |
7,759 | AR6_WGIII | 811 | 30 | If warming is limited to 2°C, the discounted economic impacts of stranded assets, including unburned fossil reserves, could be as high as USD1–4 trillion from 2015 through 2050 (USD10–20 trillion in undiscounted terms) | medium | 1 | train |
7,760 | AR6_WGIII | 811 | 55 | Global coal consumption without CCS needs to be largely eliminated by 2040–2050 to limit warming to 1.5°C (>50%), and 2050–2060 to limit warming to 2°C (>67%) | high | 2 | train |
7,761 | AR6_WGIII | 811 | 56 | New investments in coal-fired electricity without CCS are inconsistent with limiting warming to 2°C (>67%) or lower | high | 2 | train |
7,762 | AR6_WGIII | 812 | 13 | Natural gas may remain part of energy systems through mid-century, both for electricity generation and use in industry and buildings, and particularly in developed economies, even if warming is limited to 2°C (>67%) or lower | medium | 1 | train |
7,763 | AR6_WGIII | 813 | 23 | While policy interventions are necessary to achieve low-carbon energy system transitions, appropriate governance frameworks are crucial to ensure policy implementation | high | 2 | train |
7,764 | AR6_WGIII | 813 | 44 | Well-designed policy mixes can support the pursuit of multiple policy goals, target effectively different types of imperfections and framework conditions and take into account the technological, economical, and societal situation | high | 2 | train |
7,765 | AR6_WGIII | 814 | 18 | However, comprehensive evaluation of policy mixes requires a broader set of criteria that reflect different considerations, such as broader goals (e.g., SDGs) and the feasibility of policies | high | 2 | train |
7,766 | AR6_WGIII | 814 | 32 | Potential future policies are difficult to evaluate due to methodological challenges | high | 2 | train |
7,767 | AR6_WGIII | 816 | 26 | Cost reductions in key technologies, particularly in electricity and light-duty transport, have increased the economic attractiveness of near-term low-carbon energy system transitions | high | 2 | train |
7,768 | AR6_WGIII | 816 | 27 | The near-term, economic outcomes of low-carbon energy system transitions in some sectors and regions may be on par with or superior to those of an emissions-intensive future | high | 2 | train |
7,769 | AR6_WGIII | 816 | 47 | The long-term economic characteristics of low-emissions energy system transitions are not well understood, and they depend on policy design and implementation along with future costs and availability of technologies in key sectors (e.g., process heat, long- distance transport), and the ease of electrification in end-use sectors | high | 2 | train |
7,770 | AR6_WGIII | 817 | 1 | Advances in low-carbon energy resources and carriers such as next-generation biofuels, hydrogen produced from electrolysis, synthetic fuels, and carbon-neutral ammonia would substantially improve the economics of net-zero energy systems | high | 2 | train |
7,771 | AR6_WGIII | 817 | 8 | Improving efficiency and energy conservation will promote sustainable consumption and production of energy and associated materials (SDG 12) | high | 2 | train |
7,772 | AR6_WGIII | 818 | 18 | Phasing out fossil fuels in favour of low-carbon sources is likely to have considerable SDG benefits, particularly if trade-offs such as unemployment to fossil fuel workers are minimised | high | 2 | train |
7,773 | AR6_WGIII | 818 | 31 | CDR and CCS can create significant land and water trade-offs | high | 2 | train |
7,774 | AR6_WGIII | 819 | 11 | Greater energy system integration (Sections 6.4.3 and 6.6.2) would enhance energy-SDG synergies while eliminating trade-offs associated with deploying mitigation options | high | 2 | train |
7,775 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 3 | The rapid deployment of AFOLU measures is essential in all pathways staying within the limits of the remaining budget for a 1.5°C target | high | 2 | train |
7,776 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 6 | At the same time the capacity of the land to support these functions may be threatened by climate change itself | high | 2 | train |
7,777 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 8 | At the same time managed and natural terrestrial ecosystems were a carbon sink, absorbing around one third of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions | medium | 1 | train |
7,778 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 12 | If the managed and natural responses of all land to both anthropogenic environmental change and natural climate variability, estimated to be a gross sink of –12.5 ± 3.2 GtCO 2 yr–1 for the period 2010–2019, are included with land use emissions, then land overall, constituted a net sink of –6.6 ± 5.2 GtCO 2 yr–1 in terms of CO 2 emissions | medium | 1 | train |
7,779 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 14 | The rate of deforestation has generally declined, while global tree cover and global forest growing stock levels are likely increasing | medium | 1 | train |
7,780 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 22 | AFOLU CH 4 emissions continue to increase (high confidence), the main source of which is enteric fermentation from ruminant animals | high | 2 | train |
7,781 | AR6_WGIII | 886 | 23 | Similarly, AFOLU N 2O emissions are increasing, dominated by agriculture, notably from manure application, nitrogen deposition, and nitrogen fertiliser use | high | 2 | train |
7,782 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 7 | Assisting countries to overcome barriers will help to achieve significant short-term mitigation | medium | 1 | train |
7,783 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 10 | Climate change could also emerge as a barrier to AFOLU mitigation, although the IPCC AR6 WGI contribution to AR6 indicated that an increase in the capacity of natural sinks may occur, despite changes in climate | medium | 1 | train |
7,784 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 11 | The continued loss of biodiversity makes ecosystems less resilient to climate change extremes and this may further jeopardise the achievement of the AFOLU mitigation potentials indicated in this chapter (IPCC AR6 WGII and IPBES) | high | 2 | train |
7,785 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 15 | Poorly planned deployment of biomass production and afforestation options for in-forest carbon sequestration may conflict with environmental and social dimensions of sustainability | high | 2 | train |
7,786 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 16 | The global technical CDR potential of BECCS by 2050 (considering only the technical capture of CO 2 and storage underground) is estimated at 5.9 mean (0.5–11.3) GtCO 2 yr–1, of which 1.6 (0.8–3.5) GtCO 2 yr–1 is available at below USD100 tCO 2–1 | medium | 1 | train |
7,787 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 17 | Bioenergy and other bio-based products provide additional mitigation through the substitution of fossil fuels fossil-based products | high | 2 | train |
7,788 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 20 | The agriculture and forestry sectors can devise management approaches that enable biomass production and use for energy in conjunction with the production of food and timber, thereby reducing the conversion pressure on natural ecosystems | medium | 1 | train |
7,789 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 22 | Such risks can best be managed if AFOLU mitigation is pursued in response to the needs and perspectives of multiple stakeholders to achieve outcomes that maximise synergies while limiting trade-offs | medium | 1 | train |
7,790 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 26 | Integrated responses that contribute to mitigation, adaptation, and other land challenges will have greater likelihood of being successful | high | 2 | train |
7,791 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 28 | Globally, the AFOLU sector has so far contributed modestly to net mitigation, as past policies have delivered about 0.65 GtCO 2 yr–1 of mitigation during 2010–2019 or 1.4% of global gross emissions | high | 2 | train |
7,792 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 29 | The majority (>80%) of emission reduction resulted from forestry measures | high | 2 | train |
7,793 | AR6_WGIII | 887 | 34 | To date USD0.7 billion yr–1 is estimated to have been spent on AFOLU mitigation, which is well short of the more than USD400 billion yr–1 that is estimated to be necessary to deliver the up to 30% of global mitigation effort envisaged in deep mitigation scenarios | medium | 1 | test |
7,794 | AR6_WGIII | 888 | 5 | In addition to funding, these factors include governance, institutions, long-term consistent execution of measures, and the specific policy setting | high | 2 | train |
7,795 | AR6_WGIII | 888 | 8 | It would also assist in assessing collective progress in a global stocktake | high | 2 | train |
7,796 | AR6_WGIII | 888 | 13 | To enable a like-with- like comparison, the remaining cumulative global CO 2 emissions budget can be adjusted | medium | 1 | train |
7,797 | AR6_WGIII | 888 | 19 | These options could support more specific NDCs with 2 Bookkeeping models and dynamic global vegetation models.AFOLU measures that enable mitigation while also contributing to biodiversity conservation, ecosystem functioning, livelihoods for millions of farmers and foresters, and many other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) | high | 2 | train |
7,798 | AR6_WGIII | 889 | 19 | Since the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5), the share of AFOLU to anthropogenic GHG emissions had remained largely unchanged at 13–21% of total GHG emissions | medium | 1 | train |
7,799 | AR6_WGIII | 894 | 1 | While there is low agreement in the trend of global AFOLU CO 2 emissions over the past few decades (Section 7.2.2), they have remained relatively constant | medium | 1 | train |