Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the best-known and most important driver of climate change, but the climate also responds to other anthropogenic forcers that have different sources, mitigation potentials, atmospheric residence times, and climate change potential. These drivers include non-CO2 greenhouse gases, short-lived climate forcers such as aerosol and ozone precursors, and changes in the land surface. Smart targeting of these non-CO2 drivers, in combination with a serious and sustained attempt to reach net-zero CO2 emissions, could result in substantial avoided climate damages. Evaluating the climate effect of non-CO2 greenhouse gas emissions is not yet possible in most state-of-the-art climate models, though exciting developments are occurri...
Commitments to net-zero carbon dioxide (CO2) or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions targets now cover 88%...
Limiting global warming to any level requires limiting the total amount of CO2 emissions, or staying...
Climate policies must consider radiative forcing from Kyoto greenhouse gases, as well as other forci...
In 2010, the combined emissions of methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and the fluorinated gasses (F-...
Abstract The IPCC Special Report on 1.5 °C concluded that anthropogenic global warming is determined...
Climate is simulated for reference and mitigation emissions scenarios from Integrated Assessment Mod...
This study aims to create insight in how Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) perform in describing t...
It is important to understand how future environmental policies will impact both climate change and ...
The non-CO2 greenhouse gases have so far jointly contributed around 40 percent to overall global war...
The ongoing and projected impacts from human-induced climate change highlight the need for mitigatio...
It is important to understand how the reduction of other greenhouse gases than CO2 can reinforce exi...
If anthropogenic CO2 emissions were to suddenly cease, the evolution of the atmospheric CO2 concen-t...
Commitments to net-zero carbon dioxide (CO2) or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions targets now cover 88%...
Limiting global warming to any level requires limiting the total amount of CO2 emissions, or staying...
Climate policies must consider radiative forcing from Kyoto greenhouse gases, as well as other forci...
In 2010, the combined emissions of methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and the fluorinated gasses (F-...
Abstract The IPCC Special Report on 1.5 °C concluded that anthropogenic global warming is determined...
Climate is simulated for reference and mitigation emissions scenarios from Integrated Assessment Mod...
This study aims to create insight in how Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) perform in describing t...
It is important to understand how future environmental policies will impact both climate change and ...
The non-CO2 greenhouse gases have so far jointly contributed around 40 percent to overall global war...
The ongoing and projected impacts from human-induced climate change highlight the need for mitigatio...
It is important to understand how the reduction of other greenhouse gases than CO2 can reinforce exi...
If anthropogenic CO2 emissions were to suddenly cease, the evolution of the atmospheric CO2 concen-t...
Commitments to net-zero carbon dioxide (CO2) or greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions targets now cover 88%...
Limiting global warming to any level requires limiting the total amount of CO2 emissions, or staying...
Climate policies must consider radiative forcing from Kyoto greenhouse gases, as well as other forci...