4.8 Article

Impacts of COVID-19 and fiscal stimuli on global emissions and the Paris Agreement

期刊

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
卷 11, 期 3, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41558-020-00977-5

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资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [72091514, 41921005, 91846301, 71873059]
  2. National Key R&D Programme of China [2016YFA0602604]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the central universities [CXJJ-2020-301]
  4. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/N00714X/1, NE/P019900/1]
  5. Economic and Social Research Council [ES/L016028/1]
  6. British Academy [NAFR2180103]
  7. ESRC [ES/L016028/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. NERC [NE/N00714X/1, NE/P019900/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Global emissions could decrease by 3.9-5.6% over 5 years due to COVID-19, and the interconnected economy means lockdown-related declines reach beyond borders. As countries look to stimulate their economies, how fiscal incentives are allocated and invested will determine longer-term emission changes.
The global economy is facing a serious recession due to COVID-19, with implications for CO2 emissions. Here, using a global adaptive multiregional input-output model and scenarios of lockdown and fiscal counter measures, we show that global emissions from economic sectors will decrease by 3.9 to 5.6% in 5 years (2020 to 2024) compared with a no-pandemic baseline scenario (business as usual for economic growth and carbon intensity decline). Global economic interdependency via supply chains means that blocking one country's economic activities causes the emissions of other countries to decrease even without lockdown policies. Supply-chain effects contributed 90.1% of emissions decline from power production in 2020 but only 13.6% of transport sector reductions. Simulations of follow-up fiscal stimuli in 41 major countries increase global 5-yr emissions by -6.6 to 23.2 Gt (-4.7 to 16.4%), depending on the strength and structure of incentives. Therefore, smart policy is needed to turn pandemic-related emission declines into firm climate action. Global emissions could decrease 3.9-5.6% over 5 years due to COVID-19, and the interconnected economy means lockdown-related declines reach beyond borders. As countries look to stimulate their economies, how fiscal incentives are allocated and invested will determine longer-term emission changes.

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