Activities per year
Project Details
Description
The RESCUE project will improve knowledge and understanding in area c) of this call: “Climate and Earth System responses to climate neutrality and net negative emissions” by pursuing two overall objectives:
1) Quantify the climate and Earth system responses to pathways achieving climate neutrality by Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) deployment with and without temperature overshoot, and
2) Assess the potential role of CDR in reducing net GHG emissions, as well as its potential environmental risks and co-benefits.
RESCUE will expand existing knowledge on CDR methods to design a suite of new global temperature stabilization scenarios at several target values to achieve the first objective. New model developments will deliver improved climate projections with explicit representation of CDR portfolios for these scenarios. The analyses will be devoted to finding suitable pathways to climate neutrality considering multiple aspects of the Earth system response: mean climate and extremes, sea-level rise, global carbon cycling, biodiversity, and ecosystem services. Particular attention will be paid to the reversibility of induced changes by comparing scenarios with and without temperature overshoot. The second objective will be achieved by analyses assessing various factors determining overall effectiveness, impacts and co-benefits of CDR portfolios. These factors include CDR-specific CO2 uptake, CDR-induced biogeophysical climate feedbacks, CDR-derived non-CO2 radiative forcers, and the interaction between socio-economic and environmental impacts (e.g., biodiversity). Moreover, a dedicated analysis will provide key criteria for developing a monitoring system for the effectiveness of CDR portfolio deployments and their potential side effects. Stakeholders will be closely engaged throughout the project to ensure policy relevance and final update of the results which will be made freely available via existing climate services.
1) Quantify the climate and Earth system responses to pathways achieving climate neutrality by Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) deployment with and without temperature overshoot, and
2) Assess the potential role of CDR in reducing net GHG emissions, as well as its potential environmental risks and co-benefits.
RESCUE will expand existing knowledge on CDR methods to design a suite of new global temperature stabilization scenarios at several target values to achieve the first objective. New model developments will deliver improved climate projections with explicit representation of CDR portfolios for these scenarios. The analyses will be devoted to finding suitable pathways to climate neutrality considering multiple aspects of the Earth system response: mean climate and extremes, sea-level rise, global carbon cycling, biodiversity, and ecosystem services. Particular attention will be paid to the reversibility of induced changes by comparing scenarios with and without temperature overshoot. The second objective will be achieved by analyses assessing various factors determining overall effectiveness, impacts and co-benefits of CDR portfolios. These factors include CDR-specific CO2 uptake, CDR-induced biogeophysical climate feedbacks, CDR-derived non-CO2 radiative forcers, and the interaction between socio-economic and environmental impacts (e.g., biodiversity). Moreover, a dedicated analysis will provide key criteria for developing a monitoring system for the effectiveness of CDR portfolio deployments and their potential side effects. Stakeholders will be closely engaged throughout the project to ensure policy relevance and final update of the results which will be made freely available via existing climate services.
Acronym | RESCUE |
---|---|
Status | Active |
Effective start/end date | 2022/09/01 → 2026/08/31 |
Collaborative partners
- Lund University
- Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (lead)
- GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
- Stichting Joint Implementation Network (JIN)
- Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change
- Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA)
- University of Paris-Saclay
- NORCE Norwegian Research Centre
- University of Cape Town, African Climate and Development Initiative
- International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
- Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
- Climate Analytics
- Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich
- Danish Meteorological Institute
- Alfred-Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven
- ETH Zürich
Funding
- European Commission - Horizon Europe
UN Sustainable Development Goals
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This project contributes towards the following SDG(s):
UKÄ subject classification
- Climate Research
- Natural Sciences
Free keywords
- Climate Change
- Carbon cycle
- Net zero
- CDR
Infrastructure
-
Lund-Potsdam-Jena General Ecosystem Simulator (LPJ-GUESS)
Pugh, T. (Manager) & Miller, P. (Manager)
MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth systemInfrastructure
Activities
- 1 Participation in workshop/ seminar/ course
-
kick-off RESCUE
Miller, P. (Participant) & Nieradzik, L. (Participant)
2022 Sept 27 → 2022 Sept 29Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Participation in workshop/ seminar/ course