An earth system governance research agenda for carbon removal

Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) – the creation, enhancement, and upscaling of carbon sinks – has become a pillar of national and corporate commitments towards Net Zero emissions, as well as pathways towards realizing the Paris Agreement's ambitious temperature targets. In this perspective, we expl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth system governance 2024-01, Vol.19, p.100204, Article 100204
Hauptverfasser: Low, Sean, Boettcher, Miranda, Asayama, Shinichiro, Baum, Chad, Borth, Amanda, Brown, Calum, Clingerman, Forrest, Dauvergne, Peter, De Pryck, Kari, Gupta, Aarti, Honegger, Matthias, Lenzi, Dominic, Reitsma, Renate, Schenuit, Felix, Scott-Buechler, Celina, Valenzuela, Jose Maria
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) – the creation, enhancement, and upscaling of carbon sinks – has become a pillar of national and corporate commitments towards Net Zero emissions, as well as pathways towards realizing the Paris Agreement's ambitious temperature targets. In this perspective, we explore CDR as an emerging issue of Earth System Governance (ESG). We draw on the results of a workshop at the 2022 Earth System Governance conference that mapped a range of actors, activities, and issues relevant to carbon removal, and refined them into research questions spanning four intersecting areas: modeling and systems assessment, societal appraisal, policy, and innovation and industry. We filter these questions through the five lenses of the ESG framework and highlight several key ‘cross-cutting’ issues that could form the basis of an integrated ESG research agenda on CDR.
ISSN:2589-8116
2589-8116
DOI:10.1016/j.esg.2024.100204