Burning the fossil fuel reserves would release seven times the remaining carbon budget to cap global heating at 1.5C
Paris, France: Burning the world's remaining fossil fuel reserves would unleash 3.5 trillion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions—seven times the remaining carbon budget to cap global heating at 1.5C—according to the first public inventory of hydrocarbons released Monday.
Human activity since the Industrial Revolution, largely powered by coal, oil and gas, has led to just under 1.2 degrees Celsius of warming and brought with it ever fiercer droughts, floods and storms supercharged by rising seas.
The United Nations estimates that Earth's remaining carbon budget—how much more pollution we can add to the atmosphere before the 1.5C temperature goal of the Paris Agreement is missed—to be around 360 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent, or nine years at current emission levels.
The UN's annual Production Gap assessment last year found that governments plan to burn more than twice the fossil fuels by 2030 that would be consistent with a 1.5C world.
But until now there has been no comprehensive global inventory of countries' remaining reserves.