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FACTBOX-Potential curbs on greenhouse gases by 2030-UN
10 Apr 2007 15:11:50 GMT
Source: Reuters
April 10 (Reuters) - A draft U.N. report on the economics of global warming outlines a potential for big curbs in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.

The study, by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is due for release in Bangkok on May 4 after approval by scientists and more than 100 governments: SECTOR 2030 POTENTIAL CUTS (billions of tonnes carbon

dioxide equivalent) Energy supply 2.4 -- 4.7 Transport 1.6 -- 2.5 Buildings 5.7 -- 6.0 Industry 2.5 -- 5.5 Agriculture 2.3 -- 6.4 Forestry 1.3 -- 4.2 Waste 0.4 -- 1.0 TOTAL 16.2 -- 30.3

NOTES: World greenhouse gas emissions from human activities, mainly burning fossil fuels, totalled about 40 billion tonnes in 2000. The table assumes that prices for emitting carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, stay below $100 a tonne.

CURBS FROM EXISTING TECHNOLOGIES

-- ENERGY SUPPLY: more efficient supply and distribution, combined heat and power, switching from high-polluting coal to cleaner gas, nuclear power and renewable energies such as hydropower, solar, wind, geothermal and bio energy. Can also include some early applications of carbon capture and storage.

-- TRANSPORT: more fuel-efficient vehicles, hybrids, cleaner diesel, better public transport, bicycles.

-- BUILDINGS: efficient lighting, more effective insulation and ventilation, passive solar design for heating, cooling and ventilation, more efficient electrical appliances and heating and cooling devices, alternative refrigerants, better recycling.

-- INDUSTRY: Efficient electrical equipment, heat and power reuse, material recycling, control of non carbon dioxide gases.

-- AGRICULTURE: Improved management of crop and grazing land to improve soil carbon storage, restoration of degraded lands, better rice cultivation. Improved management of livestock and manure to reduce methane emissions. Better use of fertilisers, bio-energy crops to replace fossil fuels.

-- FORESTRY: Planting more trees, slowing rates of deforestation and land degradation, use of wood for bio-energy to replace fossil fuels.

-- WASTE: Tapping methane from landfills, incineration of waste with use of the energy, composting of organic waste, recycling and minimising waste. CURBS FROM FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES

-- ENERGY SUPPLY: Carbon capture and storage for gas, biomass or coal-fired power plants, advanced nuclear power and renewable energies.

-- TRANSPORT: Hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles, second generation biofuels, more efficient aircraft, advanced electric and hybrid vehicles with better batteries.

-- BUILDINGS: Integrated solar photovoltaic electricity supplies, smart metering and intelligent control.

-- INDUSTRY: Advanced energy efficiency, carbon capture and storage for cement, ammonia, fertiliser and steel production, inert electrodes for aluminium manufacture.

-- AGRICULTURE: Genetic technologies to improve energy crops

-- WASTE: Biocovers and biofilters to improve methane oxidation
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A general view of chemical companies at an industrial park in Lanzhou, capital of northwest China's Gansu province April 27, 2007. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Friday urged a policy crackdown on energy-gorging industries that belch pollution, saying his coal-dependent nation had to rein in emissions causing global warming. Wen has made a priority of cutting growth in China's consumption of oil, gas and coal, but frantic economic growth stymied energy efficiency goals for last year.



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