Navigating Energy Transitions: Mapping the road to 1.5°C
This report highlights the implications of 1.5°C scenarios for the phase-out of fossil fuels and the scale-up to renewables, barriers to transitions and solutions to such challenges, and tools for governments and financial institutions to navigate the current energy crisis while maintaining climate ambition. It also looks at the implications of the war in Ukraine for energy systems and explores whether Europe can meet its gas demand without the Russian supply.
-
Global oil and gas production must decrease by at least 65% by 2050 according to a consensus of selected 1.5°C-compatible energy scenarios. Developing any new oil and gas fields would prevent the world from limiting global warming to 1.5°C or create stranded assets.
-
Planned investments for new oil and gas to 2030 could fully finance the scale-up of wind and solar energy needed to limit global warming to 1.5°C.
-
Europe's existing gas import capacities are sufficient to meet the continent's 1.5°C-compatible energy demand from 2024 onward. Europe can and must meet its energy needs without the Russian gas supply as of 2024 to limit global warming to 1.5°C.
The world must set itself on a pathway consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C to avoid the most disruptive and tragic consequences of climate change on people, ecosystems, and economies. This is extremely urgent and every fraction of a degree matters: at present rates of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the world’s remaining carbon budget will be extinguished in approximately 8 years. The world can still achieve the 1.5°C goal, but the window to do so is narrowing quickly. Governments must urgently exceed the ambition of their current Paris Agreement pledges.
This report provides the first-ever comparison of large numbers of climate and energy pathways from various institutions to outline what is needed to limit global warming to 1.5°C. It provides an assessment of the energy policies required to align with scenarios reviewed by the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, those produced by intergovernmental organizations such as the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), and by prominent scenarios designed by private sector consultancies.
The report finds a high degree of alignment between scenarios, and draws key conclusions on:
- The required phase-out pathways for oil and gas production between now and 2050, at the global level.
- The required levels of solar and wind energy deployment to substitute fossil energy production, at both global and regional levels.
- The investment gaps between current and planned spending and the investment needed to achieve Paris-aligned investment pathways, both globally and regionally.
Moreover, the report outlines the expected impacts of the war in Ukraine on renewable energy, addresses the role of the private sector in the energy transition, and recommends a number of actions that governments, investors, and financial institutions can take in order to align with 1.5°C scenarios.
You might also be interested in
Public Financial Support for Renewable Power Generation and Integration in the G20 Countries
G20 governments provided at least USD 168 billion in public financial support for renewable power in 2023, less than one third of G20 fossil fuel subsidies that year.
Unlocking Clean Power for All
This report uses tipping point theory to advise where public funding can be strategically directed to catalyze renewable energy deployment in developing and emerging economies.
Manitoba Builds Green
This report investigates the potential to scale up a deep energy retrofit industry in Manitoba to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, create good jobs, spur green industrial growth, and improve housing quality.
Senegal’s LNG Drive Is an Economic Gamble
Senegal’s plan to drive economic growth through exports of LNG—largely to Europe—is a gamble, new research warns, as forecasts indicate an imminent decline in international demand for gas.