Not exact matches
«The bottom line of the new paper is that the very
large gap in reported HFC
emissions is from developing countries,» said Durwood Zaelke, president of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development (IGSD), who was unaffiliated with the study.
Above: the projected
emissions gap in 2030 in the UNEP report shows that countries are not planning to make the necessary GHG
emissions reductions to avoid overshooting our carbon «budget», meaning that
large - scale CDR would be necessary to fill the
gap and prevent climate change.
This «
emissions gap» between the reductions pledged and those needed to keep the climate under control is growing
larger, based on new data to be released this week by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Hare's group.
«Our analysis is the first to bridge these
gaps for a
large range of impacts, by assessing the role of human - related
emissions in each impact individually, including impacts related to trends in precipitation and sea ice.»
Over the past several years, scientific analyses have clearly demonstrated that there is a
large «
emissions gap» between the reductions in global warming pollution that are needed and the reductions that countries have pledged to make.