The 2 °C Global Temperature Target and the Evolution of the Long-Term Goal of Addressing Climate Change-From the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to the Paris Agreement

被引:206
|
作者
Gao, Yun [1 ]
Gao, Xiang [2 ]
Zhang, Xiaohua [3 ]
机构
[1] China Meteorol Adm, Dept Sci & Technol & Climate Change, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[2] Natl Dev & Reform Commiss, Energy Res Inst, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China
[3] Natl Ctr Climate Change Strategy & Int Cooperat N, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China
关键词
Climate change; International negotiation; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate; Change; United Nations Framework Convention on; Climate Change; Long-term goal; Critical vulnerability; Intuitive building;
D O I
10.1016/J.ENG.2017.01.022
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
The Paris Agreement proposed to keep the increase in global average temperature to well below 2 degrees C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels. It was thus the first international treaty to endow the 2 degrees C global temperature target with legal effect. The qualitative expression of the ultimate objective in Article 2 of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has now evolved into the numerical temperature rise target in Article 2 of the Paris Agreement. Starting with the Second Assessment Report (SAR) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an important task for subsequent assessments has been to provide scientific information to help determine the quantified long-term goal for UNFCCC negotiation. However, due to involvement in the value judgment within the scope of non-scientific assessment, the IPCC has never scientifically affirmed the unacceptable extent of global temperature rise. The setting of the long-term goal for addressing climate change has been a long process, and the 2 degrees C global temperature target is the political consensus on the basis of scientific assessment. This article analyzes the evolution of the long-term global goal for addressing climate change and its impact on scientific assessment, negotiation processes, and global low-carbon development, from aspects of the origin of the target, the series of assessments carried out by the IPCC focusing on Article 2 of the UNFCCC, and the promotion of the global temperature goal at the political level. (C) 2017 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier LTD on behalf of the Chinese Academy of Engineering and Higher Education Press Limited Company.
引用
收藏
页码:272 / 278
页数:7
相关论文
共 35 条
  • [21] Granting legitimacy from non-state actor deliberation: An example of women's groups at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
    Zhao, Bi
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE, 2024, 34 (03) : 236 - 255
  • [22] Nitrogen regulation of the climate-carbon feedback: evidence from a long-term global change experiment
    Niu, Shuli
    Sherry, Rebecca A.
    Zhou, Xuhui
    Wan, Shiqiang
    Luo, Yiqi
    ECOLOGY, 2010, 91 (11) : 3261 - 3273
  • [23] Global Journalism in Decision-Making Moments: A Case Study of Canadian and American Television Coverage of the 2009 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Copenhagen
    Konieczna, Magda
    Mattis, Kristine
    Tsai, Jiun-Yi
    Liang, Xuan
    Dunwoody, Sharon
    ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATION-A JOURNAL OF NATURE AND CULTURE, 2014, 8 (04): : 489 - 507
  • [24] ITLOS-UN Convention on the Law of the Sea-climate change mitigation-adaptation to cli-mate change-due diligence obligations-Paris Agreement-temperature goal
    Mayer, Benoit
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, 2025, 119 (01) : 153 - 160
  • [25] Predicting global patterns of long-term climate change from short-term simulations using machine learning
    Mansfield, L. A.
    Nowack, P. J.
    Kasoar, M.
    Everitt, R. G.
    Collins, W. J.
    Voulgarakis, A.
    NPJ CLIMATE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE, 2020, 3 (01)
  • [26] Predicting global patterns of long-term climate change from short-term simulations using machine learning
    L. A. Mansfield
    P. J. Nowack
    M. Kasoar
    R. G. Everitt
    W. J. Collins
    A. Voulgarakis
    npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, 3
  • [27] Modelling long-term C dynamics in croplands in the context of climate change: a case study from Ohio
    Evrendilek, F
    Wali, MK
    ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE, 2001, 16 (04) : 361 - 375
  • [28] Long-term temperature and precipitation trends in the Luquillo Mountains, and their relationships to global atmospheric indices used in climate change predictions
    Olaya-Arenas, Paola
    Melendez-Ackerman, Elvia J.
    Perez, Maria E.
    CARIBBEAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 2020, 50 (01) : 107 - 131
  • [29] A global gridded (0.1° x 0:1°) inventory of methane emissions from oil, gas, and coal exploitation based on national reports to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
    Scarpelli, Tia R.
    Jacob, Daniel J.
    Maasakkers, Joannes D.
    Sulprizio, Melissa P.
    Sheng, Jian-Xiong
    Rose, Kelly
    Romeo, Lucy
    Worden, John R.
    Janssens-Maenhout, Greet
    EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE DATA, 2020, 12 (01) : 563 - 575
  • [30] Studying long term relationship between carbon Emissions, Soil, and climate Change: Insights from a global Earth modeling Framework
    Han, Huimin
    Zeeshan, Zeeshan
    Talpur, Bandeh Ali
    Sadiq, Touseef
    Bhatti, Uzair Aslam
    Awwad, Emad Mahrous
    Al-Razgan, Muna
    Ghadi, Yazeed Yasid
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATION AND GEOINFORMATION, 2024, 130