Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

Contribution of the land sector to a 1.5 °C world

Stephanie Roe, Charlotte Streck, Michael Obersteiner, Stefan Frank, Bronson W. Griscom, Laurent Drouet, Oliver Fricko, Mykola Gusti, Nancy L. Harris, Tomoko Hasegawa, Zeke Hausfather, Peter Havlík, Joanna I. House, G.J. Nabuurs, Alexander Popp, María José Sanz Sánchez, Jonathan Sanderman, Pete Smith, Elke Stehfest, Deborah Lawrence

Nature Climate Change · 2019

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Summary

This Nature Climate Change paper, authored by leading climate and land-use modellers, examines how the land sector can contribute to limiting warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels. As suggested by the authorship and scope, the work employs integrated assessment models to evaluate mitigation strategies spanning agricultural emissions reduction, soil carbon enhancement, and dietary transition. The analysis indicates that achieving 1.5 °C targets requires coordinated action across multiple land-based mitigation options, though the precise quantification of individual pathways would require access to the full paper.

UK applicability

The findings are relevant to UK climate policy and agricultural strategy, particularly in the context of Net Zero 2050 commitments and land-use planning. However, the global modelling approach may not fully capture UK-specific agricultural conditions, soil types, or policy constraints that would influence implementation of land-sector mitigation measures.

Key measures

Greenhouse gas emission reductions, carbon sequestration potential, mitigation costs, land-use change scenarios, dietary shift impacts

Outcomes reported

The study assessed the land sector's contribution to limiting global warming to 1.5 °C through mitigation pathways and scenario modelling. It evaluated the relative roles of reducing emissions, enhancing carbon sinks, and dietary shifts in achieving climate targets.

Theme
Climate & resilience
Subject
Climate & greenhouse gas mitigation
Study type
Research
Study design
Policy report / Integrated assessment modelling
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
Global
System type
Mixed farming
DOI
10.1038/s41558-019-0591-9
Catalogue ID
BFmovi23dp-iihzsh

Topic tags

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