Where do we draw the line on CO2 emissions?
The difficult question is at what level CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere will have to peak – or be stabilised – to prevent 2°C being exceeded? Current concentrations of CO2 are at over 380 ppm (parts per million).
- If CO2 concentrations were to stay below 400ppm, staying below 2°C would be likely. However, given current energy and power infrastructures, it is very unlikely that we can keep concentrations that low.
- A level of 550ppm is very unlikely to keep us below 2°C and could even mean overshooting 4°C.
- At 475ppm the prospect of staying below 2°C is still rather slim. If 475ppm was the peak and a rapid decrease followed, by the year 2100, we have at least options to stabilise at a temperature 2°C higher than pre-industrial times.
Note: These measurements include the effect of other greenhouse gases by attributing global warming values equivalent to CO
2; greenhouse gas warming capacities are expressed in CO2 equivalents.
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Source: Meinshausen, M, What does a 2°C target mean for greenhouse gas concentrations? In ‘Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change’, 2006, Cambridge University Press