Carbon dioxide emissions from human activities must
approach zero within several decades to avoid risking grave damage from
the effects of climate change. This will require creativity and
innovation, because some types of industrial sources of atmospheric
carbon lack affordable emissions-free substitutes, according to a new
paper from team of experts led by University of California Irvine’s Steven Davis and Carnegie’s Ken Caldeira.
In addition to heating, cooling, lighting, and powering individual
vehicles—subjects that are often the focus of the emissions
discussion—there are other major contributors to atmospheric carbon that
are much more challenging to address. These tough nuts to crack include
air travel; long-distance freight by truck, train, or ship; and the
manufacture of steel and cement.
“We wanted to look closely at the barriers and opportunities related
to the most difficult-to-decarbonize services,” said lead author Davis.
The barriers they analyzed included:
- The expected increase in demand for air travel and freight shipping, sectors that already contribute about 6 percent of global emissions.
- The manufacture of cement and steel, which release 1.3 and 1.7 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere annually and are also expected to grow as infrastructure demands increase, particularly in the developing world.
- The necessity of generating and transmitting electricity with near 100 percent reliability, despite variability in renewable energy sources such as wind and solar.
“Taken together these ‘tough-nut’ sources account for a
substantial fraction of global emissions,” Caldeira said. “To
effectively address them, we will need to develop new processes and
systems. This will require both development of new technologies and
coordination and integration across industries.”
Possibilities that the team analyzed include, but aren’t limited to,
the synthesis of energy dense hydrogen or ammonia-based fuels for
aviation and shipping, new furnace technologies in the manufacture of
concrete and steel, and tools to capture and safely store hydrocarbon
emissions.
But the costs of implementing and scaling up these technologies to
overhaul the transportation, construction, and energy storage industries
will present hurdles, they warn. Plus, it will be necessary to overcome
the inertia of existing systems and policies to create something new
and better.
Source: provided by Carnegie Institution for Science.
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