Glen Peters Profile picture
Energy, emissions, & climate @CICERO_klima Projects @V_ERIFY_H2020, @4C_H2020, @ParisReinforce, @CoCO2_project, @iam_compact, @climatediamond, @EuPathfinder

May 19, 2021, 7 tweets

The IEA Net Zero 2050 scenario uses quite a lot less Bioenergy with Carbon Capture & Storage (BECCS) than scenarios assessed by the IPCC.

Consequently, all else equal, the IEA NZE2050 uses less fossil fuel in 2050 than most IPCC SR15 scenarios.

1/

iea.org/reports/net-ze…

The IEA, in contrast, has a decent (not huge) amount of Direct Air Capture (DACCS) of 0.6GtCO₂/yr.

Not many scenarios assessed by the IPCC SR15 use DACCS (4 out of 53 have non-zero data, the other 2 marked have zero DACCS)

The scenario with high DACCS is from MERGE-ETL.

2/

Since IEA NZE2050 reaches net-zero CO₂ emissions in 2050, the removals (tweets 1 & 2) must balance with (residual) emissions in 2050.

The NZE2050 clearly has far less fossil fuel use in 2050 than most IPCC SR15 assessed 1.5°C scenarios.

3/

Adding the emissions (tweet 3) & removals (tweet 1 & 2) leads to net CO₂ emissions.

The IEA NZE2050 is well within the cloud of other 1.5°C scenarios, towards the lower end, but with a lot less fossil fuel use.

4/

The NZE2050 still uses a decent amount of standard Carbon Capture & Storage (~7.6GtCO₂/yr in 2050), which is less than the median in IPCC assessed 1.5°C scenarios, but still a large amount.

5/

Most of the CCS is on industry, & the CCS on fuel supply is mainly hydrogen or biofuels production.

6/

You can find a lot of data and information in the IEA NZE2050 report, which is freely downloadable.

Though, the format of the data makes it a little challenging to get into plotting code - to put it diplomatically (cc @IEA, @daniel_huppmann)

iea.org/reports/net-ze…

7/7

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling