414 research outputs found
Which countries avoid carbon-intensive development?
This paper explores the underlying development outcomes and cumulative
emissions trajectories of 20 middle-income countries from Eastern Europe,
Latin America, North Africa and South Asia. First, it assesses their well-
being outcomes, defined in terms of access to education, democratic and legal
rights, and the infrastructures that support physical health. Second, it
estimates their emissions trajectories to 2050, taking into account current
trends in energy consumption and carbon intensity, a likely start-date for
stringent climate policy arising from the Paris Agreement (2020), and maximum
feasible rates of mitigation. Comparing these estimates to a per capita
allocation from the global carbon budget associated with 2oC, ten countries
have low-carbon development trends that will not exceed their allocation. Of
these, Costa Rica and Uruguay are achieving very high well-being outcomes,
while many more are delivering good outcomes in at least two domains of human
need. However, most are seriously deficient in terms of social well-being
(education, democratic and legal rights). These results call into question the
socio-economic convergence of developing countries with industrialised
countries; but they also reaffirm the low-emissions cost of extending good
infrastructure access and physical health outcomes to all, demonstrated by the
existence of multiple countries that continue to avoid carbon-intensive
development
Your money or your life? The carbon-development paradox
The relationship between human health and well-being, energy use and carbon emissions is a foremost concern in sustainable development. If past advances in well-being have been accomplished only through increases in energy use, there may be significant trade-offs between achieving universal human development and mitigating climate change. We test the explanatory power of economic, dietary and modern energy factors in accounting for past improvements in life expectancy, using a simple novel method, functional dynamic decomposition. We elucidate the paradox that a strong correlation between emissions and human development at one point in time does not imply that their dynamics are coupled in the long term. Increases in primary energy and carbon emissions can account for only a quarter of improvements in life expectancy, but are closely tied to growth in income. Facing this carbon-development paradox requires prioritizing human well-being over economic growth
Exploratory Chandra Observations of the Three Highest Redshift Quasars Known
We report on exploratory Chandra observations of the three highest redshift
quasars known (z = 5.82, 5.99, and 6.28), all found in the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey. These data, combined with a previous XMM-Newton observation of a z =
5.74 quasar, form a complete set of color-selected, z > 5.7 quasars. X-ray
emission is detected from all of the quasars at levels that indicate that the
X-ray to optical flux ratios of z ~ 6 optically selected quasars are similar to
those of lower redshift quasars. The observations demonstrate that it will be
feasible to obtain quality X-ray spectra of z ~ 6 quasars with current and
future X-ray missions.Comment: 15 pages, ApJL, in press; small revisions to address referee Comment
Negative emissions-Part 3 : Innovation and upscaling
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Secure robust carbon dioxide removal policy through credible certification
Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) is a key element of any mitigation strategy aiming to achieve the long-term temperature goal of the Paris Agreement, as well as national net-zero and net-negative greenhouse gas emissions targets. For robust CDR policy, the credibility of certification schemes is essential
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What are the social outcomes of climate policies? A systematic map and review of the ex-post literature
It is critical to ensure climate and energy policies are just, equitable and beneficial for communities, both to sustain public support for decarbonisation and address multifaceted societal challenges. Our objective in this article is to examine the diverse social outcomes that have resulted from climate policies, in varying contexts worldwide, over the past few decades. We review 203 ex-post climate policy assessments that analyse social outcomes in the literature. We systematically and comprehensively map out this work, identifying articles on carbon, energy and transport taxes, feed-in-tariffs, subsidies, direct procurement policies, large renewable deployment projects, and other regulatory and market-based interventions. We code each article in terms of their studied social outcomes and effects, with a focus on electricity access, energy affordability, community cohesion, employment, distributional and equity issues, livelihoods and poverty, procedural justice, subjective well-being and drudgery. Our analysis finds that climate and energy policies often fall short of delivering positive social outcomes. Nonetheless, across country contexts and policy types there are manifold examples of climate policymaking that does deliver on both social and climate goals. This requires attending to distributive and procedural justice in policy design, and making use of appropriate mechanisms to ensure that policy costs and benefits are fairly shared. We emphasize the need to further advance ex-post policy assessments and learn about what policies work for a just transition
Paleo-ENSO influence on African environments and early modern humans
Our results identify the prime driver of climate variation in Africaâs low latitudes over the past 620 kyâthe key time frame for the evolution of our species. Warming and cooling of the tropical Pacific Ocean paced by insolation changes modulated the tropical Walker circulation, driving opposing wetâdry states in eastern and western Africa. We show that the effects of glacial/interglacial cycles were not the predominant source of environmental change in most of the continent. Africaâs environmental patchwork driven by low-latitude climate processes should therefore be a critical component in conceptual models of human evolution and early demography over the past 620 ky.In this study, we synthesize terrestrial and marine proxy records, spanning the past 620 ky, to decipher pan-African climate variability and its drivers and potential linkages to hominin evolution. We find a tight correlation between moisture availability across Africa to El Niño Southern Ocean oscillation (ENSO) variability, a manifestation of the Walker Circulation, that was most likely driven by changes in Earthâs eccentricity. Our results demonstrate that low-latitude insolation was a prominent driver of pan-African climate change during the Middle to Late Pleistocene. We argue that these low-latitude climate processes governed the dispersion and evolution of vegetation as well as mammals in eastern and western Africa by increasing resource-rich and stable ecotonal settings thought to have been important to early modern humans.All study data are included in the article and/or supporting information.Results Discussion Conclusion Materials and Methods - pwPCA. - Breakpoint Analysis. - Median Calculation
Negative emissions-Part 2 : Costs, potentials and side effects
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Separation of poliovirus and poliovirus RNA on Sephadex G 200
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41675/1/705_2005_Article_BF01241426.pd
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