Arctic Sea Ice Road Maps

First-Order Priorities

Enabling conditions

  • Increasing global capacity of renewable energy by speeding up permitting, extending and modernizing electricity grids, addressing supply chain bottlenecks, and securely integrating variable renewables is critical (IEA 2023).
  • Implement energy intensity improvements by 1) improving technical efficiency of equipment, 2) switching to more efficient fuels, 3) using energy and materials more efficiently (IEA 2023).
  • Critical minerals are required for the clean energy transition, and there are not enough projects to meet the requirements, which necessitates a focus on recycling and technology innovation (IEA 2023).
  • Sharp and immediate reductions of CO2 by all countries (AMAP 2021, UNEP 2023). Most countries need to decrease their targeted net zero dates (IEA 2023).
  • Institutional and regulatory capacity, innovation, finance, improved governance and collaboration across scales, and multi-objective policies (IPCC 2022). Enhancing these enabling conditions must be a priority; see IPCC ARG Working Group 3 report for further details.
  • Further development of what priorities look like in different places for different actors will be needed.
  • Increasing global capacity of renewable energy by speeding up permitting, extending and modernizing electricity grids, addressing supply chain bottlenecks, and securely integrating variable renewables is critical (IEA 2023).
  • Implement energy intensity improvements by 1) improving technical efficiency of equipment, 2) switching to more efficient fuels, 3) using energy and materials more efficiently (IEA 2023).
  • Critical minerals are required for the clean energy transition, and there are not enough projects to meet the requirements, which necessitates a focus on recycling and technology innovation (IEA 2023).
  • Sharp and immediate reductions of CO2 by all countries (AMAP 2021, UNEP 2023). Most countries need to decrease their targeted net zero dates (IEA 2023).
  • Institutional and regulatory capacity, innovation, finance, improved governance and collaboration across scales, and multi-objective policies (IPCC 2022). Enhancing these enabling conditions must be a priority; see IPCC ARG Working Group 3 report for further details.
  • Further development of what priorities look like in different places for different actors will be needed.
  • Increase global capacity of renewable energy by speeding up permitting, extending and modernizing electricity grids, addressing supply chain bottlenecks, and securely integrating variable renewables are critical (IEA 2023).
  • Implement energy intensity improvements by 1) improving technical efficiency of equipment, 2) switching to more efficient fuels, 3) use energy and materials more efficiently (IEA 2023).
  • Critical minerals are required for the clean energy transition, and there are not enough projects to meet the requirements, which necessitates a focus on recycling and technology innovation (IEA 2023).
  • Sharp and immediate reductions of CO2 by all countries (AMAP 2021, UNEP 2023). Most countries need to decrease their targeted net zero dates (IEA 2023).
  • Institutional and regulatory capacity, innovation, finance, improved governance and collaboration across scales, and multi-objective policies (IPCC 2022). Enhancing these enabling conditions must be a priority; see IPCC ARG Working Group 3 report for further details.
  • Further development of what priorities look like in different places for different actors will be needed.

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Engagement

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  • Collaboration between policy makers, industry, and civil society to cultivate a “build big” mentality and to expedite decision making, while preserving public engagement and respecting environmental safeguards (IEA 2023).
  • International cooperation to build up shared interests and minimize risks can make net zero transitions smoother. Examples include collaborative technology demonstration and R&D projects, joint facilitation of investment in low-emissions fuel trade, and strengthening of engagement on energy-related issues (IEA 2023).
  • Collaboration between policy makers, industry, and civil society to cultivate a “build big” mentality and to expedite decision making, while preserving public engagement and respecting environmental safeguards (IEA 2023).
  • International cooperation to build up shared interests and minimize risks can make net zero transitions smoother. Examples include collaborative technology demonstration and R&D projects, joint facilitation of investment in low-emissions fuel trade, and strengthening of engagement on energy-related issues (IEA 2023).
  • Collaboration between policy makers, industry, and civil society to cultivate a “build big” mentality and to expedite decision making, while preserving public engagement and respecting environmental safeguards (IEA 2023).
  • International cooperation to build up shared interests and minimize risks can make net zero transitions smoother. Examples include collaborative technology demonstration and R&D projects, joint facilitation of investment in low-emissions fuel trade, and strengthening of engagement on energy-related issues (IEA 2023).
  • Public engagement, education, and town halls about all aspects of approaches need to be developed and implemented in parallel with research in order to determine whether this approach can be implemented.
  • Follow core engagement principles identified by the Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx) advisory committee (Jinnah et al. 2024):
    • Start engagement efforts as early as possible
    • Include social scientists with engagement expertise on research teams during the research design process
    • Don’t presuppose what communities will be concerned about
    • Develop a plan to be responsive to community concern

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

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