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Climate Change 2016
October 27-29, 2016
Volume 7, Issue 9(Suppl)
J Earth Sci Clim Change
ISSN: 2157-7617 JESCC, an open access journal
conferenceseries
.com
October 24-26, 2016 Valencia, Spain
World Conference on
Climate Change
Decarbonizing the global economy-An integrated assessment of low carbon emission scenarios
Mohammad Mohammadi Khabbazan
University of Hamburg, Germany
G
iven damages from climate change are highly uncertain and have the potential to be catastrophic; the precautionary
principle provides a strong incentive to policymakers for mitigating of and adapting to climate change. In 2015 the
Conference of the Parties (COP 21) agreed on pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above preindustrial
levels while finding no consent on decarbonizing the global economy and instead, the final agreement called for enhanced
scientific investigation of "low carbon emission scenarios." While many studies focus on carbon concentration, targeting low
carbon emission can be considered as one innovation of this paper, which is also more in line with recent climate policy
proposals. We employ a cost-effectiveness analysis using the coupled climate-energy-economy integrated assessment model
of investment and endogenous technological Development (MIND), which consists of a one-box climate module with ocean
heat uptake, a stylized energy sector module and a Ramsey-type economic growth module. To better capture ocean sink, we
extended MIND's climate module to the two-box version by the Dynamic Integrated model of Climate and the Economy
(DICE). Our results indicate recent climate policy proposals might not comply with the 1.5° C target, and even achieving the
2°C target is prohibitively expensive. Specifically, we find decarbonizing the global economy by 2080 seems to become feasible
at a cost of 0.59 percent in terms of Balanced Growth Equivalents, if the investments in renewable energy production peak at
more than 2 percent of global gross domestic product in 2040 and decline thereafter.
Biography
Mohammad Mohammadi Khabbazan is Associate Researcher and Scientific Programmer at Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN), Cluster of
Excellence (CliSAP), at University of Hamburg. He acquired his PhD in Economics from Tarbiat Modares University (Tehran) in 2015 and wrote his thesis on “The
economic effects of sanctions on Iran’s Economy”. His main research interests focus on Political Economics, International and Trade Economics, Economics of
Climate Change, Natural Resource and Energy Economics, Integrated Assessment Modeling, General Equilibrium Theory and Agent-Based Modeling.
sascha.hokamp@uni-hamburg.deMohammad Mohammadi Khabbazan, J Earth Sci Clim Change 2016, 7:9(Suppl)
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2157-7617.C1.027