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Does Shale Gas have a role in Annex 1 climate change commitments?. Prof Kevin Anderson and Dr John Broderick Tyndall Manchester. www.tyndall.manchester.ac.uk. john.broderick@manchester.ac.uk. Key Point. Natural Gas ( inc. shale gas) is not a low carbon fuel.
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Does Shale Gas have a role in Annex 1 climate change commitments? Prof Kevin Anderson and Dr John Broderick Tyndall Manchester www.tyndall.manchester.ac.uk john.broderick@manchester.ac.uk
Key Point Natural Gas (inc. shale gas) is not a low carbon fuel
Context • The international energy agency’s (IEA) view on climate change • on track for a 3.5°C rise by 2040 (i.e. 4.2°C relative to preindustrial) • “When I look at this data, the trend is perfectly in line with a temperature increase of 6 degrees Celsius, which would have devastating consequences for the planet.” • “we have 5 years to change the energy system – or have it changed” FatihBirol- IEA chief economist
UNFCCC • “stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system” Article 2
What is dangerous? • ‘To hold the increase in global temperature below 2 degrees Celsius, and take action to meet this objective consistent with science and on the basis of equity’ • Copenhagen Accord (2009/10), Cancun Agreement (2010/11) • ‘… must ensure global average temperature increases do not exceed preindustrial levels by more than 2°C’ • European Commission’s annual communication (2009)
What is mitigation challenge? • To hold cumulative emissions of CO2 in the atmosphere at levels that provide a high probability (90%-99%) of staying below a 2°C rise in global surface temperature
What emissions pathways fits with 2°C? • In 2012 it is too late for a high probability of staying below 2°C i.e. already blown the budget for our existing commitments • So lets take an outside chance (<50:50) chance of ‘avoiding dangerous CC’ • With significant reductions in deforestation & halving food-related emissions • What is left for emissions from energy? i.e. the pathway for 50:50 chance of avoiding dangerous climate change
… for energy emissions? (with 2020 peak & a high probability of exceeding 2°C) Increasing probability of exceeding 2°C 2050 2030
… and for energy emissions? (with 2020 peak & a high probability of exceeding 2°C) 10-20% annual reductions Globally: no emission space for coal, gas, or shale – even with CCS! 2050 2030
… and for Annex 1 nations (~OECD)? • 40% reduction by 2015 • 70% reduction by 2020 • 90+% reduction by 2030
Why such different conclusions? Context • Take science-based view of 2°C (i.e. cumulative emissions not 2050 targets) • ‘Fair’ division of emissions between Annex 1 & non-Annex 1 • Explicit account of global deforestation and food emissions NB: decarbonising power sector is not the same as “avoiding dangerous climate change” Impact • Timeframe of transition to low/zero carbon energysystem significantly reduced • Gas not compatible with such a science-based timeframe • Gas with CCS only compatible with very high capture (over 95%) NB: research priorities should be genuinely low or zero carbon energy technologies
For unconventional gas Non-Annex 1 Part of rapid carbon intensity reduction if upstream emissions are managed … but must lock out other fossil fuel infrastructures & enable CCS Annex 1 Incompatible with even weak version of 2°C commitments - inc.with CCS • Rapid reduction in energy demand; and • increase in very low/zero energy supply necessary