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Net zero emissions

Global net zero emissions describes the state where emissions of carbon dioxide due to human activities and removals of these gases are in balance over a given period. It is often called simply net zero.[2] In some cases, emissions refers to emissions of all greenhouse gases, and in others it refers only to emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2).[2] To reach net zero targets requires actions to reduce emissions. One example would be by shifting from fossil fuel energy to sustainable energy sources. Organizations often offset their residual emissions by buying carbon credits.

Estimated global warming by 2100 associated with various scenarios: Green dots: The International Energy Agency's proposal for reducing energy-related emissions to net zero by 2050 is consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C. Yellow dots: Net-zero pledges and other pledges to reduce emissions would limit temperature rise to around 1.7°C. Blue dots: Since many climate pledges are not backed by policies, policies announced as of 2022 would limit temperature rise to around 2.5°C. Red dots: Before the 2015 Paris Agreement, the world was on a trajectory for global warming of 3.5°C.[1]

People often use the terms net zero emissions, carbon neutrality, and climate neutrality with the same meaning.[3][4][5][6]: 22–24  However in some cases, these terms have different meanings from each other.[3] For example, some standards for carbon neutral certification allow a lot of carbon offsetting. But net zero standards require reducing emissions to more than 90% and then only offsetting the remaining 10% or less to fall in line with 1.5°C targets.[7]

In the last few years, net zero has become the main framework for climate action. Many countries and organizations are setting net zero targets.[8][9] As of November 2023, around 145 countries had announced or are considering net zero targets, covering close to 90% of global emissions.[10] They include some countries that were resistant to climate action in previous decades.[11][9] Country-level net zero targets now cover 92% of global GDP, 88% of emissions and 89% of the world population.[9] 65% of the largest 2,000 publicly traded companies by annual revenue[9] have net zero targets. Among Fortune 500 companies the percentage is 63%.[12][13] Company targets can result from both voluntary action and government regulation.

Net zero claims vary enormously in how credible they are, but most have low credibility despite the increasing number of commitments and targets.[14] While 61% of global carbon dioxide emissions are covered by some sort of net zero target, credible targets cover only 7% of emissions. This low credibility reflects a lack of binding regulation. It is also due to the need for continued innovation and investment to make decarbonization possible.[15]

To date, 27 countries have enacted domestic net zero legislation. These are laws that legislatures have passed which contain net zero targets or equivalent.[16] There is currently no national regulation in place that legally requires companies based in that country to achieve net zero. Several countries, for example Switzerland, are developing such legislation.[17]

History and scientific justification edit

The idea of net zero came out of research in the late 2000s into how the atmosphere, oceans and carbon cycle were reacting to CO2 emissions. This research found that global warming will only stop if CO2 emissions are reduced to net zero.[18] Net zero was basic to the goals of the Paris Agreement. This stated that the world must "achieve a balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases in the second half of this century". The term "net zero" gained popularity after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published its Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C (SR15) in 2018, this report stated that "Reaching and sustaining net zero global anthropogenic [human-caused] CO2 emissions and declining net non-CO2 radiative forcing would halt anthropogenic global warming on multi-decadal timescales (high confidence)."[19]

The idea of net zero emissions is often confused with "stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere". This is a term that dates from the 1992 Rio Convention. The two concepts are not the same. This is because the carbon cycle continuously sequesters or absorbs a small percentage of cumulative historical human-caused CO2 emissions into vegetation and the ocean. This happens even after current CO2 emissions are reduced to zero.[20] If the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere were kept constant, some CO2 emissions could continue. However global average surface temperatures would continue to increase for many centuries due to the gradual adjustment of deep ocean temperatures. If CO2 emissions that result directly from human activities are reduced to net zero, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere would decline. This would be at a rate just fast enough to compensate for this deep ocean adjustment. The result would be approximately constant global average surface temperatures over decades or centuries.[21][20]

It will be quicker to reach net-zero emissions for CO2 alone rather than CO2 plus other greenhouse gases like methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases.[22] The net-zero target date for non-CO2 emissions is later partly because modellers assume that some of these emissions such as methane from farming are harder to phase out.[22] Emissions of short-lived gases such as methane do not accumulate in the climate system in the same way that CO2 does. Therefore there is no need to reduce them to zero to halt global warming. This is because reductions in emissions of short-lived gases cause an immediate decline in the resulting radiative forcing. Radiative forcing is the change in the Earth's energy balance that they cause.[23] However, these potent but short-lived gases will drive temperatures higher in the short term. This could possibly push the rise in temperature past the 1.5 °C threshold much earlier.[22] A comprehensive net-zero emissions target would include all greenhouse gases. This would ensure that the world would also urgently reduce non-CO2 gases.[22]

Terminology edit

Countries, local governments, corporations, and financial institutions may all announce pledges for achieving to reach net zero emissions.[24]

In climate change discussions, the terms net zero, carbon neutrality, and climate neutrality are often used as if they mean the same thing.[3][4][5][6]: 22–24  In some contexts, however, they have different meanings from each other. The sections below explain this.[3] People often use these terms without rigorous standard definitions.[25][3]

Implementation edit

Since 2015, there has been significant growth in the number of actors pledging net zero emissions. Many standards have emerged that interpret the net zero concept and aim to measure progress towards net zero targets.[24]: 38  Some of these standards are more robust than others. Some people have criticized weak standards for facilitating greenwashing.[24]: 38  The UN, UNFCCC, International Organization for Standardization (ISO), and the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) promote more robust standards.[26][27][24][28]

Types of greenhouse gas edit

Some targets aim to reach net zero emissions only for carbon dioxide. Others aim to reach net zero emissions of all greenhouse gases.[3] Robust net zero standards state that all greenhouse gases should be covered by a given actor's targets.[24][28][29][26]

Some authors say that carbon neutrality strategies focus only on carbon dioxide, but net zero includes all greenhouse gases.[30][31] However some publications, such as the national strategy of France, use the term "carbon neutral" to mean net reductions of all greenhouse gases.[3] The United States has pledged to achieve "net zero" emissions by 2050. As of March 2021 it had not specified which greenhouse gases will be included in its target.[3]

Scopes of emissions sources edit

The Greenhouse Gas Protocol is a group of standards that are the most common in GHG accounting.[32] These standards reflect a number of accounting principles. They include relevance, completeness, consistency, transparency, and accuracy.[33] The standards divide emissions into three scopes:

  • Scope 1 covers all direct GHG emissions within a corporate boundary (owned or controlled by a company).[34] It includes fuel burned by the company, use of company vehicles, and fugitive emissions.[35]
  • Scope 2 covers indirect GHG emissions from consumption of purchased electricity, heat, cooling or steam.[36] As of 2010, at least one third of global GHG emissions are Scope 2.[37]
  • Scope 3 emission sources include emissions from suppliers and product users (also known as the "value chain"). Transportation of goods, and other indirect emissions are also part of this scope.[38] Scope 3 emissions these were estimated to represent 75% of all emissions reported to the Carbon Disclosure Project, though that percentage varies widely amongst business sectors.[39]

Corporate net zero targets vary in how widely they cover emissions related to the company's activities. This can greatly affect the volume of emissions that are counted.[3] Some oil companies, for instance, claim that their operations (Scopes 1 and 2) produce net zero emissions.[40] These claims do not cover the emissions produced when the oil is burned by its customers, which are 70 - 90% of oil-related emissions. This is because they count as Scope 3 emissions.[41]

Robust net zero standards require Scope 3 emissions to be counted,[24][42][29][26] but "carbon neutrality" standards do not.[43][better source needed]

Approaches edit

 
The terms 'carbon neutral' and 'net zero' are often used interchangeably by politicians, businesses and scientists. Some experts use the terms differently, as illustrated by this graphic.[44]

A given actor may plan to achieve net zero emissions through a combination of approaches. These would include (1) actions to reduce their own emissions, (2) actions to directly remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and (3) purchasing carbon credits.[3]

Reducing emissions edit

Robust net zero standards require actors to reduce their own emissions as much as possible following science-based pathways. They must then balance their residual emissions using removals and offsets.[24]: 12  This typically involves shifting from fossil fuels to sustainable energy sources. Residual emissions are emissions that are not practical to reduce for technological reasons.[45]

Experts and net zero frameworks disagree over the exact percentage of residual emissions that may be allowed.[24][28][29][26] Most guidance suggests this should be limited to a small fraction of total emissions. Sector-specific and geographical factors would determine how much.[46][45] The Science Based Targets initiative says that residual emissions across most sectors should fall between 5-10% of an organization's baseline emissions. It should be even lower for some sectors with competitive alternatives like the power sector.[26] Sectors such as heavy manufacturing where it is harder to mitigate emissions will probably have a higher percentage of residual emissions by 2050.[47][48]

The ISO and British Standards Institution (BSI) publish "carbon neutrality" standards that have higher tolerance for residual emissions than "net zero" standards.[27][49] For example, BSI PAS 2060 is a British standard for measuring carbon neutrality. According to these standards, carbon neutrality is a short-term target, and net zero is a longer-term target.[50][51]

Carbon removals and offsets edit

To balance residual emissions, actors may take direct action to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and sequester it. Alternatively or in addition they can buy carbon credits that "offset" emissions. Carbon credits can be used to fund carbon removal projects such as reforestation.

Strong standards such as the ISO and BSI "net zero" standards only allow removal-based offsets that have the same permanence as the greenhouse gases that they balance. The term for this concept is "like for like" removals.[24][28][29][26] Permanence means that removals must store greenhouse gases for the same period as the lifetime of the GHG emissions they balance.[24][28][29][26] For example, methane has a lifetime of around 12 years in the atmosphere.[52] Carbon dioxide lasts between 300 and 1,000 years.[53] Accordingly, removals that balance carbon dioxide must last much longer than removals that balance methane.

Carbon credits can also fund initiatives that aim to avoid emissions. One example would be energy efficiency retrofits or renewable energy projects. Avoided emissions offsets result from actions that reduce emissions relative to a baseline or status quo. But they do not remove emissions from the atmosphere. Weak standards such as ISO and BSI "carbon neutrality" standards allow organizations to use avoided-emissions carbon credits. They do not specify how permanent or durable a credit must be.[27][49]

Carbon offsetting has been criticized on several fronts. One important concern is that offsets may delay active emissions reductions.[54] In a 2007 report from the Transnational Institute, Kevin Smith likened carbon offsets to medieval indulgences. He said they allowed people to pay "offset companies to absolve them of their carbon sins."[55] He said this permits a "business as usual" attitude that stifles required major changes. Many people have criticized offsets for playing a part in greenwashing. This argument appeared in a 2021 watchdog ruling against Shell.[56]

Loose regulation of claims by carbon offsetting schemes combined with the difficulties in calculating greenhouse gas sequestration and emissions reductions has also given rise to criticism. This argument is that this can result in schemes that do not adequately offset emissions in reality.[54] There have been moves to create better regulation. The United Nations has operated a certification process for carbon offsets since 2001. This is called the Clean Development Mechanism.[57][58] It aims to stimulate "sustainable development and emission reductions, while giving industrialized countries some flexibility in how they meet their emission reduction limitation targets."[57] The UK Government's Climate Change Committee says reported emissions reductions or removals may have happened anyway or. not last into the future. This is despite an improvement in standards globally and in the UK.[54]

There has also been criticisms of non-native and monocultural forest plantations as carbon offsets. This is because of their "limited—and at times negative—effects on native biodiversity" and other ecosystem services.[59]

Most of the carbon credits on the voluntary market today do not meet UN, UNFCCC, ISO or SBTi standards for permanent carbon dioxide removals.[24][28][29][26] So significant investment in carbon capture and permanent geological storage will probably be necessary to achieve net-zero targets by mid-century.[29]

Timeframe edit

To achieve net zero, actors are encouraged to set net zero targets for 2050 or earlier.[24][28][29][26] Long-term net zero targets should be supplemented by interim targets for every one to five years.[24][28][29][26] The UN, UNFCCC, ISO, and SBTi all say that organizations should prioritize early, front-loaded emissions reduction. They say they should aim to halve emissions by 2030.[24][28][29][26] Specific emissions reduction targets and pathways may look different for different sectors. Some may be able to decarbonize more quickly and easily than others.[24][28][29][26]

Many companies often claim a commitment to reach net zero emissions by the year 2050. These promises are often made at the corporate level. Both governments and international agencies encourage businesses to contribute to a national, or international, net zero pledge. The International Energy Agency says that global investment in low carbon substitutes for fossil fuels needs to reach US$4 trillion annually by 2030 for the world to get to net zero by 2050.[60][61]

Some groups have raised concerns that net zero cannot be achieved worldwide by 2050.[citation needed]

On average, approximately 29% of companies in EU member states have formulated a respective target to achieve net zero or have already reached this goal. However, these numbers can vary significantly across different industries, countries, and firm sizes.[62] External pressures, such as companies' exposure to risks associated with climate change and its perception as a problem, can influence a company's ambition to adopt specific targets and strategies.[63]

Comprehensive accounting edit

The guidance from standards institutions says that organizations should choose a base year to measure emissions reductions against. This should be representative of their typical greenhouse gas profile.[26] They should explain the choice of baseline and how they will account for changes in conditions since the baseline.[29] Financial organizations should also include emissions within their portfolio. This should include all organizations they have financed, invested in, or insured.[24][28][29][26] Countries and regions should include both territorial emissions released within their boundaries and consumption emissions related to products and services imported and consumed within their boundaries.[24][28][29][26]

Cities and countries pose a challenge when it comes to calculating emissions. This is because the production of products and services within their boundaries might be linked to either internal consumption or exports. At the same time the population also consumes imported products and services. So it is important to state explicitly whether emissions are counted at the location of production or consumption. This helps to prevent double counting. The lengthy manufacturing chains of a globalised market might make this challenging. There are additional challenges with looking at renewable energy systems and electric vehicle batteries. This is because the necessary embodied energy and other effects of raw material extraction are often significant when measuring life-cycle emissions. However the local emissions at the place they are used may be small.[64]

Equity and impact edit

The concept of net zero has attracted criticism for the impact it could have on equity and distribution. The use of removals or carbon credits for offsetting has been particularly controversial. This is because of the possibility that offset projects themselves could have harmful effects. The ISO Net Zero Guidelines say that net zero strategies should align with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.This is in order to "support equity and global transition to a net zero economy, and any subsequent UN global goals which supersede the 2030 SDGs."[29] The UNFCCC's Race to Zero campaign says emissions reductions and removals should "safeguard the rights of the most vulnerable people and communities". It says that organizations should disclose how they will support communities affected by climate impacts and climate transition.[28]

Alignment with the global net zero goal edit

The United Nations High-Level Expert Group on the Net Zero Emissions Commitments of Non-State Entities has made several recommendations for non-state actors. Non-state actors include cities, regional governments, financial institutions, and corporations. One of these is not financing new fossil fuel development. Another is supporting strong climate policy. And another is ensuring that business activities and investments do not contribute to deforestation.[24]: 12–13 

Country examples edit

According to World Population Review, a number of countries have net zero, or net negative carbon emissions: Bhutan, Comoros, Gabon, Guyana, Madagascar, Panama, and Suriname.[65] However, according to the World Resources Institute, all of these countries have net positive greenhouse gas emissions.[66] These countries generally have a high level of forestation.[65]

Standards for products edit

Leading standards and guidance allow official accreditation bodies to certify products as carbon neutral but not as net zero.[29][page needed] The rationale behind this is that until organizations and their supply chains are on track for net zero, allowing a product to claim to be net zero at this point would be disingenuous and lead to greenwashing.[29]

Credibility edit

 
Status of net-zero carbon emissions targets as of October, 2023 . The inclusion criteria for net-zero commitments may vary from country to country.

More and more nations and private and public-sector organizations are committing to net zero. But the credibility of these claims remains low.[14] There is no binding regulation requiring a transition to net zero. So the overwhelming majority of net zero commitments have been made on a voluntary basis.[67] The lack of an enforcement mechanism surrounding these claims means that many are dubious. In many sectors such as steel, cement, and chemicals, the pathway to reaching net zero in terms of technology remains unclear.[68] Further investment in research and innovation and further regulation will probably be necessary if net zero claims are to become more credible.

Tzeporah Berman, chair of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative, has criticized net zero claims by fossil fuel companies, describing them "delusional and based on bad science".[69]

A consortium of climate scientists has tracked net zero commitments. Their research found that net pledges drafted in law or policy documentation have grown from 7% of countries in 2020 to 75% in 2023. However, very few have met the minimum requirements for a "decent pledge". The UN Race to Zero campaign calls them "starting line criteria". This states that they must have a "plan and published evidence of action taken towards reaching the target" besides a stated pledge, [70]

The role of carbon credits edit

One of the main reasons for the low credibility of many net zero claims is their heavy reliance on carbon credits. Carbon credits are often used for offsetting. They reduce or remove emissions of carbon dioxide or other greenhouse gases in order to compensate for emissions made elsewhere.[71][72] Many fossil fuel companies have made commitments to be net zero by 2050.[73] At the same time they continue to increase greenhouse gas emissions by extracting and producing fossil fuels.[74] They claim that they will use carbon credits and carbon capture technology in order to continue extracting and burning fossil fuels. The UN has condemned such pledges as dangerous examples of greenwashing.[75]

Financial impact edit

 
  Net GDP benefit
  Chronic damages avoided
  Acute damages avoided
  Costs of mitigation
Percentage change in world GDP in a net zero scenario. The solid line shows the increase in GDP that would result from efforts to reduce emissions to net zero.

The International Monetary Fund estimates that compared to current government policies, shifting policies to bring emissions to net zero by 2050 would result in global gross domestic product (GDP) being 7 percent higher. In its estimates, the cost of emissions reductions in 2050 is less than 2% of world GDP, and the cost savings from reducing the effects of climate change are approximately 9% of world GDP.[76]

Criticism edit

Climate scientists James Dyke, Bob Watson, and Wolfgang Knorr argue that the concept of net zero has been harmful for emissions reductions. This is because it allows actors to defer present-day emissions reductions by relying on future, unproved technological fixes. Examples are carbon offsetting, carbon dioxide removal and geoengineering. "The problems come when it is assumed that these [technological fixes] can be deployed at vast scale. This effectively serves as a blank cheque for the continued burning of fossil fuels and the acceleration of habitat destruction", they said. By tracing the history of previous failures in climate policy at reducing emissions from 1988 to 2021, they said they "[arrive] at the painful realisation that the idea of net zero has licensed a recklessly cavalier 'burn now, pay later' approach which has seen carbon emissions continue to soar". They concluded: "Current net zero policies will not keep warming to within 1.5 °C because they were never intended to. They were and still are driven by a need to protect business as usual, not the climate. If we want to keep people safe then large and sustained cuts to carbon emissions need to happen now. [...] The time for wishful thinking is over."[77]

In his 2021 report, Dangerous Distractions, economist Marc Lee said that net zero had the potential to be a dangerous distraction that reduced political pressure to reduce emissions. [78][79] "A net zero target means less incentive to get to 'real zero' emissions from fossil fuels, an escape hatch that perpetuates business as usual and delays more meaningful climate action," he said. "Rather than gambling on carbon removal technologies of the future, Canada should plan for a managed wind down of fossil fuel production and invest public resources in bona fide solutions like renewables and a just transition from fossil fuels," he said.[79][78]

At the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27), the High-Level Expert Group on the Net Zero Emissions Commitments of Non-State Entities of the United Nations formed the previous March by U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres and chaired by former Canadian Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna released a report that stated that the carbon neutrality pledges of many corporations, local governments, regional governments, and financial institutions around the world often amount to nothing more than greenwashing and provided 10 recommendations to ensure greater credibility and accountability for carbon neutrality pledges such as requiring non-state actors to publicly disclose and report verifiable information (e.g. greenhouse gas inventories and carbon footprint accounting in prospectus for financial securities) that substantiates compliance with such pledges.[80][81][82] After the release of the report, a research consortium called the Net Zero Tracker that includes the NewClimate Institute, the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, the Data-Driven EnviroLab of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the Net Zero Initiative at the University of Oxford issued a report evaluating the climate neutrality pledges of 116 of 713 regional governments, of 241 of 1,177 cities with populations greater than 500,000, and of 1,156 of 2,000 publicly listed companies in the 25 countries with the greatest emissions (whose pledges cover more than 90% of the gross world product) by the recommendations of the UN report and found that many these pledges were largely unsubstantiated and more than half of cities had no plan for tracking and reporting compliance with pledges.[83][84]

See also edit

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zero, emissions, global, zero, emissions, describes, state, where, emissions, carbon, dioxide, human, activities, removals, these, gases, balance, over, given, period, often, called, simply, zero, some, cases, emissions, refers, emissions, greenhouse, gases, o. Global net zero emissions describes the state where emissions of carbon dioxide due to human activities and removals of these gases are in balance over a given period It is often called simply net zero 2 In some cases emissions refers to emissions of all greenhouse gases and in others it refers only to emissions of carbon dioxide CO2 2 To reach net zero targets requires actions to reduce emissions One example would be by shifting from fossil fuel energy to sustainable energy sources Organizations often offset their residual emissions by buying carbon credits Estimated global warming by 2100 associated with various scenarios Green dots The International Energy Agency s proposal for reducing energy related emissions to net zero by 2050 is consistent with limiting global warming to 1 5 C Yellow dots Net zero pledges and other pledges to reduce emissions would limit temperature rise to around 1 7 C Blue dots Since many climate pledges are not backed by policies policies announced as of 2022 would limit temperature rise to around 2 5 C Red dots Before the 2015 Paris Agreement the world was on a trajectory for global warming of 3 5 C 1 People often use the terms net zero emissions carbon neutrality and climate neutrality with the same meaning 3 4 5 6 22 24 However in some cases these terms have different meanings from each other 3 For example some standards for carbon neutral certification allow a lot of carbon offsetting But net zero standards require reducing emissions to more than 90 and then only offsetting the remaining 10 or less to fall in line with 1 5 C targets 7 In the last few years net zero has become the main framework for climate action Many countries and organizations are setting net zero targets 8 9 As of November 2023 around 145 countries had announced or are considering net zero targets covering close to 90 of global emissions 10 They include some countries that were resistant to climate action in previous decades 11 9 Country level net zero targets now cover 92 of global GDP 88 of emissions and 89 of the world population 9 65 of the largest 2 000 publicly traded companies by annual revenue 9 have net zero targets Among Fortune 500 companies the percentage is 63 12 13 Company targets can result from both voluntary action and government regulation Net zero claims vary enormously in how credible they are but most have low credibility despite the increasing number of commitments and targets 14 While 61 of global carbon dioxide emissions are covered by some sort of net zero target credible targets cover only 7 of emissions This low credibility reflects a lack of binding regulation It is also due to the need for continued innovation and investment to make decarbonization possible 15 To date 27 countries have enacted domestic net zero legislation These are laws that legislatures have passed which contain net zero targets or equivalent 16 There is currently no national regulation in place that legally requires companies based in that country to achieve net zero Several countries for example Switzerland are developing such legislation 17 Contents 1 History and scientific justification 2 Terminology 3 Implementation 3 1 Types of greenhouse gas 3 2 Scopes of emissions sources 3 3 Approaches 3 3 1 Reducing emissions 3 3 2 Carbon removals and offsets 3 4 Timeframe 3 5 Comprehensive accounting 3 6 Equity and impact 3 7 Alignment with the global net zero goal 3 8 Country examples 4 Standards for products 5 Credibility 5 1 The role of carbon credits 6 Financial impact 7 Criticism 8 See also 9 References 9 1 SourcesHistory and scientific justification editThe idea of net zero came out of research in the late 2000s into how the atmosphere oceans and carbon cycle were reacting to CO2 emissions This research found that global warming will only stop if CO2 emissions are reduced to net zero 18 Net zero was basic to the goals of the Paris Agreement This stated that the world must achieve a balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases in the second half of this century The term net zero gained popularity after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published its Special Report on Global Warming of 1 5 C SR15 in 2018 this report stated that Reaching and sustaining net zero global anthropogenic human caused CO2 emissions and declining net non CO2 radiative forcing would halt anthropogenic global warming on multi decadal timescales high confidence 19 The idea of net zero emissions is often confused with stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere This is a term that dates from the 1992 Rio Convention The two concepts are not the same This is because the carbon cycle continuously sequesters or absorbs a small percentage of cumulative historical human caused CO2 emissions into vegetation and the ocean This happens even after current CO2 emissions are reduced to zero 20 If the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere were kept constant some CO2 emissions could continue However global average surface temperatures would continue to increase for many centuries due to the gradual adjustment of deep ocean temperatures If CO2 emissions that result directly from human activities are reduced to net zero the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere would decline This would be at a rate just fast enough to compensate for this deep ocean adjustment The result would be approximately constant global average surface temperatures over decades or centuries 21 20 It will be quicker to reach net zero emissions for CO2 alone rather than CO2 plus other greenhouse gases like methane nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases 22 The net zero target date for non CO2 emissions is later partly because modellers assume that some of these emissions such as methane from farming are harder to phase out 22 Emissions of short lived gases such as methane do not accumulate in the climate system in the same way that CO2 does Therefore there is no need to reduce them to zero to halt global warming This is because reductions in emissions of short lived gases cause an immediate decline in the resulting radiative forcing Radiative forcing is the change in the Earth s energy balance that they cause 23 However these potent but short lived gases will drive temperatures higher in the short term This could possibly push the rise in temperature past the 1 5 C threshold much earlier 22 A comprehensive net zero emissions target would include all greenhouse gases This would ensure that the world would also urgently reduce non CO2 gases 22 Terminology editCountries local governments corporations and financial institutions may all announce pledges for achieving to reach net zero emissions 24 In climate change discussions the terms net zero carbon neutrality and climate neutrality are often used as if they mean the same thing 3 4 5 6 22 24 In some contexts however they have different meanings from each other The sections below explain this 3 People often use these terms without rigorous standard definitions 25 3 Implementation editSince 2015 there has been significant growth in the number of actors pledging net zero emissions Many standards have emerged that interpret the net zero concept and aim to measure progress towards net zero targets 24 38 Some of these standards are more robust than others Some people have criticized weak standards for facilitating greenwashing 24 38 The UN UNFCCC International Organization for Standardization ISO and the Science Based Targets initiative SBTi promote more robust standards 26 27 24 28 Types of greenhouse gas edit Some targets aim to reach net zero emissions only for carbon dioxide Others aim to reach net zero emissions of all greenhouse gases 3 Robust net zero standards state that all greenhouse gases should be covered by a given actor s targets 24 28 29 26 Some authors say that carbon neutrality strategies focus only on carbon dioxide but net zero includes all greenhouse gases 30 31 However some publications such as the national strategy of France use the term carbon neutral to mean net reductions of all greenhouse gases 3 The United States has pledged to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 As of March 2021 it had not specified which greenhouse gases will be included in its target 3 Scopes of emissions sources edit The Greenhouse Gas Protocol is a group of standards that are the most common in GHG accounting 32 These standards reflect a number of accounting principles They include relevance completeness consistency transparency and accuracy 33 The standards divide emissions into three scopes Scope 1 covers all direct GHG emissions within a corporate boundary owned or controlled by a company 34 It includes fuel burned by the company use of company vehicles and fugitive emissions 35 Scope 2 covers indirect GHG emissions from consumption of purchased electricity heat cooling or steam 36 As of 2010 at least one third of global GHG emissions are Scope 2 37 Scope 3 emission sources include emissions from suppliers and product users also known as the value chain Transportation of goods and other indirect emissions are also part of this scope 38 Scope 3 emissions these were estimated to represent 75 of all emissions reported to the Carbon Disclosure Project though that percentage varies widely amongst business sectors 39 Corporate net zero targets vary in how widely they cover emissions related to the company s activities This can greatly affect the volume of emissions that are counted 3 Some oil companies for instance claim that their operations Scopes 1 and 2 produce net zero emissions 40 These claims do not cover the emissions produced when the oil is burned by its customers which are 70 90 of oil related emissions This is because they count as Scope 3 emissions 41 Robust net zero standards require Scope 3 emissions to be counted 24 42 29 26 but carbon neutrality standards do not 43 better source needed Approaches edit nbsp The terms carbon neutral and net zero are often used interchangeably by politicians businesses and scientists Some experts use the terms differently as illustrated by this graphic 44 A given actor may plan to achieve net zero emissions through a combination of approaches These would include 1 actions to reduce their own emissions 2 actions to directly remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and 3 purchasing carbon credits 3 Reducing emissions edit Robust net zero standards require actors to reduce their own emissions as much as possible following science based pathways They must then balance their residual emissions using removals and offsets 24 12 This typically involves shifting from fossil fuels to sustainable energy sources Residual emissions are emissions that are not practical to reduce for technological reasons 45 Experts and net zero frameworks disagree over the exact percentage of residual emissions that may be allowed 24 28 29 26 Most guidance suggests this should be limited to a small fraction of total emissions Sector specific and geographical factors would determine how much 46 45 The Science Based Targets initiative says that residual emissions across most sectors should fall between 5 10 of an organization s baseline emissions It should be even lower for some sectors with competitive alternatives like the power sector 26 Sectors such as heavy manufacturing where it is harder to mitigate emissions will probably have a higher percentage of residual emissions by 2050 47 48 The ISO and British Standards Institution BSI publish carbon neutrality standards that have higher tolerance for residual emissions than net zero standards 27 49 For example BSI PAS 2060 is a British standard for measuring carbon neutrality According to these standards carbon neutrality is a short term target and net zero is a longer term target 50 51 Carbon removals and offsets edit Further information Carbon dioxide removal and Carbon offsets and credits To balance residual emissions actors may take direct action to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and sequester it Alternatively or in addition they can buy carbon credits that offset emissions Carbon credits can be used to fund carbon removal projects such as reforestation Strong standards such as the ISO and BSI net zero standards only allow removal based offsets that have the same permanence as the greenhouse gases that they balance The term for this concept is like for like removals 24 28 29 26 Permanence means that removals must store greenhouse gases for the same period as the lifetime of the GHG emissions they balance 24 28 29 26 For example methane has a lifetime of around 12 years in the atmosphere 52 Carbon dioxide lasts between 300 and 1 000 years 53 Accordingly removals that balance carbon dioxide must last much longer than removals that balance methane Carbon credits can also fund initiatives that aim to avoid emissions One example would be energy efficiency retrofits or renewable energy projects Avoided emissions offsets result from actions that reduce emissions relative to a baseline or status quo But they do not remove emissions from the atmosphere Weak standards such as ISO and BSI carbon neutrality standards allow organizations to use avoided emissions carbon credits They do not specify how permanent or durable a credit must be 27 49 Carbon offsetting has been criticized on several fronts One important concern is that offsets may delay active emissions reductions 54 In a 2007 report from the Transnational Institute Kevin Smith likened carbon offsets to medieval indulgences He said they allowed people to pay offset companies to absolve them of their carbon sins 55 He said this permits a business as usual attitude that stifles required major changes Many people have criticized offsets for playing a part in greenwashing This argument appeared in a 2021 watchdog ruling against Shell 56 Loose regulation of claims by carbon offsetting schemes combined with the difficulties in calculating greenhouse gas sequestration and emissions reductions has also given rise to criticism This argument is that this can result in schemes that do not adequately offset emissions in reality 54 There have been moves to create better regulation The United Nations has operated a certification process for carbon offsets since 2001 This is called the Clean Development Mechanism 57 58 It aims to stimulate sustainable development and emission reductions while giving industrialized countries some flexibility in how they meet their emission reduction limitation targets 57 The UK Government s Climate Change Committee says reported emissions reductions or removals may have happened anyway or not last into the future This is despite an improvement in standards globally and in the UK 54 There has also been criticisms of non native and monocultural forest plantations as carbon offsets This is because of their limited and at times negative effects on native biodiversity and other ecosystem services 59 Most of the carbon credits on the voluntary market today do not meet UN UNFCCC ISO or SBTi standards for permanent carbon dioxide removals 24 28 29 26 So significant investment in carbon capture and permanent geological storage will probably be necessary to achieve net zero targets by mid century 29 Timeframe edit To achieve net zero actors are encouraged to set net zero targets for 2050 or earlier 24 28 29 26 Long term net zero targets should be supplemented by interim targets for every one to five years 24 28 29 26 The UN UNFCCC ISO and SBTi all say that organizations should prioritize early front loaded emissions reduction They say they should aim to halve emissions by 2030 24 28 29 26 Specific emissions reduction targets and pathways may look different for different sectors Some may be able to decarbonize more quickly and easily than others 24 28 29 26 Many companies often claim a commitment to reach net zero emissions by the year 2050 These promises are often made at the corporate level Both governments and international agencies encourage businesses to contribute to a national or international net zero pledge The International Energy Agency says that global investment in low carbon substitutes for fossil fuels needs to reach US 4 trillion annually by 2030 for the world to get to net zero by 2050 60 61 Some groups have raised concerns that net zero cannot be achieved worldwide by 2050 citation needed On average approximately 29 of companies in EU member states have formulated a respective target to achieve net zero or have already reached this goal However these numbers can vary significantly across different industries countries and firm sizes 62 External pressures such as companies exposure to risks associated with climate change and its perception as a problem can influence a company s ambition to adopt specific targets and strategies 63 Comprehensive accounting edit The guidance from standards institutions says that organizations should choose a base year to measure emissions reductions against This should be representative of their typical greenhouse gas profile 26 They should explain the choice of baseline and how they will account for changes in conditions since the baseline 29 Financial organizations should also include emissions within their portfolio This should include all organizations they have financed invested in or insured 24 28 29 26 Countries and regions should include both territorial emissions released within their boundaries and consumption emissions related to products and services imported and consumed within their boundaries 24 28 29 26 Cities and countries pose a challenge when it comes to calculating emissions This is because the production of products and services within their boundaries might be linked to either internal consumption or exports At the same time the population also consumes imported products and services So it is important to state explicitly whether emissions are counted at the location of production or consumption This helps to prevent double counting The lengthy manufacturing chains of a globalised market might make this challenging There are additional challenges with looking at renewable energy systems and electric vehicle batteries This is because the necessary embodied energy and other effects of raw material extraction are often significant when measuring life cycle emissions However the local emissions at the place they are used may be small 64 Equity and impact edit The concept of net zero has attracted criticism for the impact it could have on equity and distribution The use of removals or carbon credits for offsetting has been particularly controversial This is because of the possibility that offset projects themselves could have harmful effects The ISO Net Zero Guidelines say that net zero strategies should align with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals This is in order to support equity and global transition to a net zero economy and any subsequent UN global goals which supersede the 2030 SDGs 29 The UNFCCC s Race to Zero campaign says emissions reductions and removals should safeguard the rights of the most vulnerable people and communities It says that organizations should disclose how they will support communities affected by climate impacts and climate transition 28 Alignment with the global net zero goal edit The United Nations High Level Expert Group on the Net Zero Emissions Commitments of Non State Entities has made several recommendations for non state actors Non state actors include cities regional governments financial institutions and corporations One of these is not financing new fossil fuel development Another is supporting strong climate policy And another is ensuring that business activities and investments do not contribute to deforestation 24 12 13 Country examples edit According to World Population Review a number of countries have net zero or net negative carbon emissions Bhutan Comoros Gabon Guyana Madagascar Panama and Suriname 65 However according to the World Resources Institute all of these countries have net positive greenhouse gas emissions 66 These countries generally have a high level of forestation 65 Standards for products editLeading standards and guidance allow official accreditation bodies to certify products as carbon neutral but not as net zero 29 page needed The rationale behind this is that until organizations and their supply chains are on track for net zero allowing a product to claim to be net zero at this point would be disingenuous and lead to greenwashing 29 Credibility edit nbsp Status of net zero carbon emissions targets as of October 2023 The inclusion criteria for net zero commitments may vary from country to country More and more nations and private and public sector organizations are committing to net zero But the credibility of these claims remains low 14 There is no binding regulation requiring a transition to net zero So the overwhelming majority of net zero commitments have been made on a voluntary basis 67 The lack of an enforcement mechanism surrounding these claims means that many are dubious In many sectors such as steel cement and chemicals the pathway to reaching net zero in terms of technology remains unclear 68 Further investment in research and innovation and further regulation will probably be necessary if net zero claims are to become more credible Tzeporah Berman chair of the Fossil Fuel Non Proliferation Treaty Initiative has criticized net zero claims by fossil fuel companies describing them delusional and based on bad science 69 A consortium of climate scientists has tracked net zero commitments Their research found that net pledges drafted in law or policy documentation have grown from 7 of countries in 2020 to 75 in 2023 However very few have met the minimum requirements for a decent pledge The UN Race to Zero campaign calls them starting line criteria This states that they must have a plan and published evidence of action taken towards reaching the target besides a stated pledge 70 The role of carbon credits edit One of the main reasons for the low credibility of many net zero claims is their heavy reliance on carbon credits Carbon credits are often used for offsetting They reduce or remove emissions of carbon dioxide or other greenhouse gases in order to compensate for emissions made elsewhere 71 72 Many fossil fuel companies have made commitments to be net zero by 2050 73 At the same time they continue to increase greenhouse gas emissions by extracting and producing fossil fuels 74 They claim that they will use carbon credits and carbon capture technology in order to continue extracting and burning fossil fuels The UN has condemned such pledges as dangerous examples of greenwashing 75 Financial impact edit nbsp Net GDP benefit Chronic damages avoided Acute damages avoided Costs of mitigationPercentage change in world GDP in a net zero scenario The solid line shows the increase in GDP that would result from efforts to reduce emissions to net zero The International Monetary Fund estimates that compared to current government policies shifting policies to bring emissions to net zero by 2050 would result in global gross domestic product GDP being 7 percent higher In its estimates the cost of emissions reductions in 2050 is less than 2 of world GDP and the cost savings from reducing the effects of climate change are approximately 9 of world GDP 76 Criticism editSee also Carbon offsets and credits Limitations and drawbacks Climate scientists James Dyke Bob Watson and Wolfgang Knorr argue that the concept of net zero has been harmful for emissions reductions This is because it allows actors to defer present day emissions reductions by relying on future unproved technological fixes Examples are carbon offsetting carbon dioxide removal and geoengineering The problems come when it is assumed that these technological fixes can be deployed at vast scale This effectively serves as a blank cheque for the continued burning of fossil fuels and the acceleration of habitat destruction they said By tracing the history of previous failures in climate policy at reducing emissions from 1988 to 2021 they said they arrive at the painful realisation that the idea of net zero has licensed a recklessly cavalier burn now pay later approach which has seen carbon emissions continue to soar They concluded Current net zero policies will not keep warming to within 1 5 C because they were never intended to They were and still are driven by a need to protect business as usual not the climate If we want to keep people safe then large and sustained cuts to carbon emissions need to happen now The time for wishful thinking is over 77 In his 2021 report Dangerous Distractions economist Marc Lee said that net zero had the potential to be a dangerous distraction that reduced political pressure to reduce emissions 78 79 A net zero target means less incentive to get to real zero emissions from fossil fuels an escape hatch that perpetuates business as usual and delays more meaningful climate action he said Rather than gambling on carbon removal technologies of the future Canada should plan for a managed wind down of fossil fuel production and invest public resources in bona fide solutions like renewables and a just transition from fossil fuels he said 79 78 At the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference COP27 the High Level Expert Group on the Net Zero Emissions Commitments of Non State Entities of the United Nations formed the previous March by U N Secretary General Antonio Guterres and chaired by former Canadian Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna released a report that stated that the carbon neutrality pledges of many corporations local governments regional governments and financial institutions around the world often amount to nothing more than greenwashing and provided 10 recommendations to ensure greater credibility and accountability for carbon neutrality pledges such as requiring non state actors to publicly disclose and report verifiable information e g greenhouse gas inventories and carbon footprint accounting in prospectus for financial securities that substantiates compliance with such pledges 80 81 82 After the release of the report a research consortium called the Net Zero Tracker that includes the NewClimate Institute the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit the Data Driven EnviroLab of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Net Zero Initiative at the University of Oxford issued a report evaluating the climate neutrality pledges of 116 of 713 regional governments of 241 of 1 177 cities with populations greater than 500 000 and of 1 156 of 2 000 publicly listed companies in the 25 countries with the greatest emissions whose pledges cover more than 90 of the gross world product by the recommendations of the UN report and found that many these pledges were largely unsubstantiated and more than half of cities had no plan for tracking and reporting compliance with pledges 83 84 See also editCarbon footprint Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance Carbon Neutrality Coalition Carbon neutrality in India Carbon neutrality in the United States European Green Deal Low carbon economyReferences edit Key findings World Energy Outlook 2022 Analysis IEA Retrieved 2023 09 01 a b Fankhauser Sam Smith Stephen M Allen Myles Axelsson Kaya Hale Thomas Hepburn Cameron Kendall J Michael Khosla Radhika Lezaun Javier Mitchell Larson Eli Obersteiner Michael Rajamani Lavanya Rickaby Rosalind Seddon Nathalie Wetzer Thom 2022 The meaning of net zero and how to get it right Nature Climate Change 12 1 15 21 Bibcode 2022NatCC 12 15F doi 10 1038 s41558 021 01245 w a b c d e f g h i j Rogelj Joeri Geden Oliver Cowie Annette Reisinger Andy 16 March 2021 Net zero emissions targets are vague three ways to fix Nature 591 7850 365 368 Bibcode 2021Natur 591 365R doi 10 1038 d41586 021 00662 3 hdl 10044 1 87657 ISSN 1476 4687 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Climate Intelligence Unit 25 October 2021 Retrieved 29 March 2023 a b More companies setting net zero climate targets but few have credible plans report says AP News 11 June 2023 Retrieved 31 July 2023 Get Net Zero Right PDF UNFCC Evolving regulation of companies in climate change framework laws Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment Retrieved 26 July 2023 Federal Act on Climate Protection Goals Innovation and Strengthening Energy Security Climate Change Laws of the World climate laws org Retrieved 26 July 2023 Allen Myles R Friedlingstein Pierre Girardin Cecile A J Jenkins Stuart Malhi Yadvinder Mitchell Larson Eli Peters Glen P Rajamani Lavanya 17 October 2022 Net Zero Science Origins and Implications Annual Review of Environment and Resources 47 1 849 887 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 112320 105050 hdl 11250 3118584 ISSN 1543 5938 S2CID 251891777 Global Warming of 1 5 C Retrieved 17 April 2023 a b Hausfather Zeke 2021 04 29 Explainer Will global warming stop as soon as net zero emissions are reached Carbon Brief Retrieved 2023 09 09 Solomon Susan Plattner Gian Kasper Knutti Reto Friedlingstein Pierre 2009 02 10 Irreversible climate change due to carbon dioxide emissions Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 6 1704 1709 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 1704S doi 10 1073 pnas 0812721106 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2632717 PMID 19179281 a b c d Levin Kelly Fransen Taryn Schumer Clea Davis Chantal Boehm Sophie 2023 03 20 What Does Net Zero Emissions Mean 8 Common Questions Answered World Resources Institute nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is available under the CC BY 4 0 license Pierrehumbert R T 2014 05 30 Short Lived Climate Pollution Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 42 1 341 379 Bibcode 2014AREPS 42 341P doi 10 1146 annurev earth 060313 054843 ISSN 0084 6597 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r United Nations High Level Expert Group on the Net Zero Emissions Commitments of Non State Entities 2022 Integrity 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