Emergency deployment of direct air capture as a response to the climate crisis

Though highly motivated to slow the climate crisis, governments may struggle to impose costly polices on entrenched interest groups, resulting in a greater need for negative emissions. Here, we model wartime-like crash deployment of direct air capture (DAC) as a policy response to the climate crisis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-01, Vol.12 (1), p.368-13, Article 368
Hauptverfasser: Hanna, Ryan, Abdulla, Ahmed, Xu, Yangyang, Victor, David G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Though highly motivated to slow the climate crisis, governments may struggle to impose costly polices on entrenched interest groups, resulting in a greater need for negative emissions. Here, we model wartime-like crash deployment of direct air capture (DAC) as a policy response to the climate crisis, calculating funding, net CO 2 removal, and climate impacts. An emergency DAC program, with investment of 1.2–1.9% of global GDP annually, removes 2.2–2.3 GtCO 2 yr –1 in 2050, 13–20 GtCO 2 yr –1 in 2075, and 570–840 GtCO 2 cumulatively over 2025–2100. Compared to a future in which policy efforts to control emissions follow current trends (SSP2-4.5), DAC substantially hastens the onset of net-zero CO 2 emissions (to 2085–2095) and peak warming (to 2090–2095); yet warming still reaches 2.4–2.5 °C in 2100. Such massive CO 2 removals hinge on near-term investment to boost the future capacity for upscaling. DAC is most cost-effective when using electricity sources already available today: hydropower and natural gas with renewables; fully renewable systems are more expensive because their low load factors do not allow efficient amortization of capital-intensive DAC plants. Governments may struggle to impose costly polices on vital industries, resulting in a greater need for negative emissions. Here, the authors model a direct air capture crash deployment program, finding it can remove 2.3 GtCO 2 yr –1 in 2050, 13–20 GtCO 2 yr –1 in 2075, and 570–840 GtCO 2 cumulative over 2025–2100.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-20437-0