1 research outputs found
Climate Penalty for Shifting Shipping to the Arctic
The
changing climate in the Arctic opens new shipping routes. A
shift to shorter Arctic transit will, however, incur a climate penalty
over the first one and a half centuries. We investigate the net climate
effect of diverting a segment of Europe–Asia container traffic
from the Suez to an Arctic transit route. We find an initial net warming
for the first one-and-a-half centuries, which gradually declines and
transitions to net cooling as the effects of CO<sub>2</sub> reductions
become dominant, resulting in climate mitigation only in the long
term. Thus, the possibilities for shifting shipping to the Arctic
confront policymakers with the question of how to weigh a century-scale
warming with large uncertainties versus a long-term climate benefit
from CO<sub>2</sub> reductions