Publications
Implications of Accelerated and Delayed Climate Action for Ireland’s Energy Transition under Carbon Budget
Analysis of Ireland’s mitigation pathways under equal per-capita carbon budgets using an energy systems optimisation model. Our findings reveal that delayed mitigation brings forward the need for a net-zero target by five years, risks carbon lock-in and stranded assets, increase reliance on carbon dioxide removal technologies and leads to higher long-term mitigation costs. To keep the Paris Agreement targets, countries must set and meet accelerated mid-term mitigation goals and address energy demand.
- Authors
Dr. Vahid Aryanpur, Prof Hannah Daly, Olekandr Balyk, James Glynn, Ankita Gaur, Jason Mc Guire.
- Year
- 2024
- Journal Name
- npj Climate Action
- Category
- Journal Article
- Keywords
- Carbon Budgets, Energy Modelling, Energy Policy, Ireland, Energy Transition, Climate Action
- Project
- Full Citation
Aryanpur, V., Balyk, O., Glynn, J., Gaur, A., McGuire, J. and Daly, H. (2024). Implications of accelerated and delayed climate action for Ireland’s energy transition under carbon budgets. npj Climate Action, 3(1). doi:https://doi.org/10.1038/s44168-024-00181-7.
- Link to Publication
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s44168-024-00181-7
Abstract
Limiting global warming requires the effective implementation of energy mitigation measures by individual countries. However, the consequences of the timing of these efforts on the technical feasibility of adhering to cumulative carbon budgets—which determines future global warming—are underexplored. Moreover, existing national studies on carbon budgets either overlook integrated sectoral interactions, path dependencies, or comprehensive demand-side strategies.