Arctic Sea Ice Road Maps

State of Approach

Overview

Glossary of road map assessment parameters

Description of approach

  • Methane (CH4) is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone”.
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.

Description of what it does mechanistically

  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.

Spatial extent (size)

  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.

Where applied – vertically

  • Mostly on land surface

Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)

  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).

When effective (summer, winter, all year)

  • All year
Glossary of road map assessment parameters Description of approach
  • Methane (CH4) is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone”.
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year
Glossary of road map assessment parameters Description of approach
  • Methane (CH4) is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone.”
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year
Description of approach
  • Methane (CH4) is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone.”
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year
Description of approach
  • Methane (CH4) is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone.”
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year
Description of approach
  • Methane is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone.”
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year
Description of approach
  • Methane is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas after CO2 and is responsible for about 30% of global mean temperature increase since the Industrial Revolution (AMAP 2021 full report, IPCC 2021, IEA 2024). Reductions in methane emissions would be effective for short-term cooling of the Earth, as methane is a short-lived constituent of the atmosphere. Methane is also well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. There is high confidence by the IPCC (2021) that “strong, rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions can limit near-term warming and improve air quality by reducing global surface ozone.”
  • Pathways to reduce methane emissions include 1) strengthening methane mitigation policies, 2) reducing leaks and venting in the oil and gas sector, 3) eliminating flaring from oil and gas operations, 4) reducing enteric methane by improving feeding and manure management on farms or other methods, 5) eliminating gas in new construction and phasing out leaky gas stoves, 6) upgrading solid waste and wastewater treatment, and 7) reducing food waste and improving landfill management (Zaelke et al. 2023).
    • The energy sector accounts for about 35% of anthropogenic methane emissions and has the largest potential for abatement in the immediate decades (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • The International Energy Association’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) Scenario that limits the global average surface temperature rise to 1.5 °C with no or low overshoot includes a 75% cut in methane emissions from fossil fuel production and use by 2030 (IEA 2024).
  • See UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021, 2022, IGSD 2023, and IEA 2024 for more detailed information about methane emissions reductions pathways.
Description of what it does mechanistically
  • Methane emissions reduction approaches either emit zero methane emissions or lower current methane emissions. By implementing these technologies, methane emissions will decrease, thereby slowing increases in global mean surface temperature.
Spatial extent (size)
  • Varies by approach, but likely small spatial footprint
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure.
Where applied – vertically
  • Mostly on land surface
Where applied – geographically (regional vs global application, is it targeting the Arctic?)
  • Global application
    • Methane is generally well-mixed in the atmosphere, and therefore, methane emissions reductions could happen outside of the Arctic and still make a difference in the Arctic. Methane concentrations are higher in the Northern Hemisphere, although the mechanisms are unclear (Nisbet et al. 2021).
When effective? (summer, winter, all year)
  • All year

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Potential

Impact on

Albedo

  • Unknown

Temperature

  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030.
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report).

Radiation budget

  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown

Sea ice

  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming.
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability

  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.

Efficiency

  • Unknown

Timeline to scalability

  • < 10 years
    • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).

Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost

  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term” (IEA 2023).
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).

CO2 footprint

  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature
  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030.
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report).
Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming.
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
  • < 10 years
    • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term” (IEA 2023).
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature
  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030.
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report).
Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
  • < 10 years
    • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature
  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030.
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report).
Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
  • < 10 years
    • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature
  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report)
Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
  • < 10 years
    • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature
  • Global
  • Arctic region
    • Decrease up to 0.5°C by 2050 compared to trajectory with no targeted methane mitigation.
      • Decrease in Arctic of 0.5°C by 2050 (0.3°C by 2040s; UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021) if cut emissions by 40-45% by 2030
      • Mitigating short lived climate pollutants, including methane, in addition to decarbonization would reduce the rate of Arctic warming by 2/3 (Zaelke et al. 2023).
      • Maximum feasible reductions of global methane emissions from anthropogenic sources could lead to a reduction in the warming rate of 0.047°C per decade from 2015-2050 relative to current emissions (AMAP 2021). Corresponding temperature decrease of 0.035°C by 2030, 0.164°C by 2050 (AMAP 2021 full report)
Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
    • < 10 years
      • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
    • < 10 years
      • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Impact on

Albedo
  • Unknown
Temperature Radiation budget
  • Global
    • Unknown
  • Arctic region
    • Unknown
Sea ice
  • Direct or indirect impact on sea ice?
    • Indirect via decreases in greenhouse gas concentrations and subsequent decreases in warming
  • New or old ice?
    • Both
  • Impact on sea ice

Scalability

Spatial scalability
  • Spatially scalable
    • Many approaches will have a small spatial footprint and rely on existing infrastructure and operational footprints.
Efficiency
  • Unknown
Timeline to scalability
    • < 10 years
      • 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions from energy production, agriculture, and waste could be cut by 2030 with existing technology (IGSD 2023).
Timeline to global impact (has to be within 20 yr) Timeline to Arctic region impact (has to be within 20 yr)

Cost

Economic cost
  • About 60% of available targeted measures have mitigation costs less than US $21 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) for GWP100 and less than US $7 per tonne of CO2e for GWP20. Just over 50% of those have negative costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021 in Zaelke et al. 2023).
  • For about 85% of approaches for methane emissions reductions the benefits outweigh the costs (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2022).
  • “Cutting methane emissions from the energy sector by 75% by 2030 is one of the least cost opportunities to limit global warming in the near term.” (IEA 2023)
    • Estimated costs for cutting methane by 75% from oil and gas operations is $75 billion USD (2% of net income from the oil and gas industry in 2022; IEA 2023).
CO2 footprint
  • Unknown

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Technology readiness

TRL

  • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9.
  • Summary of existing literature and studies
    • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
    • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.

Technology feasibility within 10 years

  • Feasible
    • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation.
TRL
  • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9.
  • Summary of existing literature and studies
    • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
    • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.
Technology feasibility within 10 years
  • Feasible
    • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation.
TRL
  • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9
  • Summary of existing literature and studies
    • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
    • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.
Technology feasibility within 10 years
  • Feasible
    • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation.
TRL
  • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9
  • Summary of existing literature and studies
    • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
    • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
    • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.
Technology feasibility within 10 years
  • Feasible
    • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation
TRL
    • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9
    • Summary of existing literature and studies
      • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
      • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
      • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.
Technology feasibility within 10 years
    • Feasible
      • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation
  • TRL
    • Varies depending on technology, but many are 9
    • Summary of existing literature and studies
      • 57% of methane emissions are technically feasible to mitigate today, yet only 24% of emissions mitigation are economically feasible with no net cost (Ocko et al. 2021).
      • Implementation of existing technologies could cut 45% of anthropogenic methane emissions by 2030 from energy production, agriculture, and waste (UNEP and Climate and Clean Air Coalition 2021).
      • Methane emissions monitoring systems exist and are under development, although more are needed. For a summary of methane measurement and monitoring initiatives see IGSD 2023.
  • Technology feasibility within 10 years
    • Feasible
      • Many approaches are feasible, while some need major innovation

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Socio-ecological co-benefits and risks

Missing information in this section does not indicate the absence of risks or co-benefits; it simply reflects that sufficient information is not yet available.

Physical and chemical changes

Impacts on species

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on ecosystems

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on society

Ease of reversibility

  • Easy
    • Impacts of methane emissions reductions would be reversed quickly if emissions reductions measures were omitted and emissions returned.

Risk of termination shock

  • No risk
    • If emissions reductions measured were halted and emissions were allowed to rise, temperatures could increase rapidly due to the potency of methane and its short lifetime. However, this scenario seems unlikely.
Missing information in this section does not indicate the absence of risks or co-benefits; it simply reflects that sufficient information is not yet available.

Physical and chemical changes

Impacts on species

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on ecosystems

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on society

Ease of reversibility

  • Easy
    • Impacts of methane emissions reductions would be reversed quickly if emissions reductions measures were omitted and emissions returned.

Risk of termination shock

  • No risk
    • If emissions reductions measured were halted and emissions were allowed to rise, temperatures could increase rapidly due to the potency of methane and its short lifetime. However, this scenario seems unlikely.
Missing information in this section does not indicate the absence of risks or co-benefits; it simply reflects that sufficient information is not yet available.

Physical and chemical changes

Impacts on species

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on ecosystems

  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown

Impacts on society

Ease of reversibility

  • Impacts of methane emissions reductions would be reversed quickly if emissions reductions measures were omitted and emissions returned.

Risk of termination shock

  • If emissions reductions measured were halted and emissions were allowed to rise, temperatures could increase rapidly due to the potency of methane and its short lifetime. However, this scenario seems unlikely.
Missing information in this section does not indicate the absence of risks or co-benefits; it simply reflects that sufficient information is not yet available. Physical and chemical changes Impacts on species
  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown
Impacts on ecosystems
  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown
Impacts on society Ease of reversibility
  • Impacts of methane emissions reductions would be reversed quickly if emissions reductions measures were omitted and emissions returned.
Risk of termination shock
  • If emissions reductions measured were halted and emissions were allowed to rise, temperatures could increase rapidly due to the potency of methane and its short lifetime. However, this scenario seems unlikely.
Missing information in this section does not indicate the absence of risks or co-benefits; it simply reflects that sufficient information is not yet available. Physical and chemical changes Impacts on species
  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown
Impacts on ecosystems
  • Co-benefits
    • Unknown
  • Risks
    • Unknown
Impacts on society Ease of reversibility
  • Impacts of methane emissions reductions would be reversed quickly if emissions reductions measures were omitted and emissions returned
Risk of termination shock
  • If emissions reductions measured were halted and emissions were allowed to rise, temperatures could increase rapidly due to the potency of methane and its short lifetime. However, this scenario seems unlikely.

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

Governance considerations

International vs national jurisdiction

  • National
    • Action on methane is occurring at the national and subnational level, strengthened by international pledges, such as the Global Methane Pledge.

Existing governance

  • International
    • International collaboration is critical for action on methane. For a summary of public and private international organizations and initiatives see IGSD 2023.
    • Around 150 countries have signed on to the Global Methane Pledge. This voluntary agreement has a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% below 2020 levels by 2030. Implementation of the pledge would decrease temperatures by at least 0.2°C by 2050. The Global Methane Pledge forms a foundation to create a global methane agreement, with the Montreal Protocol providing a framework structure and approach (IGSD 2023).
    • See IGSD 2023 for a summary of potential international governance pathways including The Global Methane Pledge and Glasgow Climate Pact, the Gothenburg Protocol to the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, the US-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s, and the Montreal Protocol.
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023). The Global Methane Hub is an international coordinated approach trying to strengthen methane mitigation funding.
  • Several countries have released or are building national methane action plans, and some oil and gas companies have also set methane targets (IEA 2023). For a summary of country-specific methane mitigation measures see IGSD 2023.
  • Across international and national governance mechanisms, verification of methane action is lacking (Nisbet et al. 2021).

Justice

  • Here we define justice related to approaches to slow the loss of Arctic sea ice through distributive justice, procedural justice, and restorative justice. Following COMEST (2023), we consider questions of ethics through a justice lens. Note that this is not an exhaustive list of justice dimensions and as the field advances, so will the related considerations and dimensions.
  • Distributive justice
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023) and funding is not distributed equally across sectors or geographies.
    • Methane monitoring systems are not distributed appropriately geographically (Nisbet et al. 2021).
  • Procedural justice
    • Opportunities for participation in governance of emissions reductions have increased over time. Localized actions can enable participation but can be limited by resource and capacity constraints (IPCC 2022).
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific procedural justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
  • Restorative justice
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific restorative justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.

Public engagement and perception

  • A 2023 public opinion poll commissioned by the Global Methane Hub conducted in 17 countries reports that 82% of respondents support methane mitigation (GMH 2024).

Engagement with Indigenous communities

  • Unknown
International vs national jurisdiction
  • National
    • Action on methane is occurring at the national and subnational level, strengthened by international pledges, such as the Global Methane Pledge.
Existing governance
  • International
    • International collaboration is critical for action on methane. For a summary of public and private international organizations and initiatives see IGSD 2023.
    • Around 150 countries have signed on to the Global Methane Pledge. This voluntary agreement has a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% below 2020 levels by 2030. Implementation of the pledge would decrease temperatures by at least 0.2°C by 2050. The Global Methane Pledge forms a foundation to create a global methane agreement, with the Montreal Protocol providing a framework structure and approach (IGSD 2023).
    • See IGSD 2023 for a summary of potential international governance pathways including The Global Methane Pledge and Glasgow Climate Pact, the Gothenburg Protocol to the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, the US-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s, and the Montreal Protocol.
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023). The Global Methane Hub is an international coordinated approach trying to strengthen methane mitigation funding.
  • Several countries have released or are building national methane action plans, and some oil and gas companies have also set methane targets (IEA 2023). For a summary of country-specific methane mitigation measures see IGSD 2023.
  • Across international and national governance mechanisms, verification of methane action is lacking (Nisbet et al. 2021).
Justice
  • Here we define justice related to approaches to slow the loss of Arctic sea ice through distributive justice, procedural justice, and restorative justice. Following COMEST (2023), we consider questions of ethics through a justice lens. Note that this is not an exhaustive list of justice dimensions and as the field advances, so will the related considerations and dimensions.
  • Distributive justice
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023) and funding is not distributed equally across sectors or geographies.
    • Methane monitoring systems are not distributed appropriately geographically (Nisbet et al. 2021).
  • Procedural justice
    • Opportunities for participation in governance of emissions reductions have increased over time. Localized actions can enable participation but can be limited by resource and capacity constraints (IPCC 2022).
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific procedural justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
  • Restorative justice
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific restorative justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
Public engagement and perception
  • A 2023 public opinion poll commissioned by the Global Methane Hub conducted in 17 countries reports that 82% of respondents support methane mitigation (GMH 2024).
Engagement with Indigenous communities
  • Unknown
International vs national jurisdiction
  • National
    • Action on methane is occurring at the national and subnational level, strengthened by international pledges, such as the Global Methane Pledge.
Existing governance
  • International
    • International collaboration is critical for action on methane. For a summary of public and private international organizations and initiatives see IGSD 2023.
    • Around 150 countries have signed on to the Global Methane Pledge. This voluntary agreement has a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% below 2020 levels by 2030. Implementation of the pledge would decrease temperatures by at least 0.2°C by 2050. The Global Methane Pledge forms a foundation to create a global methane agreement, with the Montreal Protocol providing a framework structure and approach (IGSD 2023).
    • See IGSD 2023 for a summary of potential international governance pathways including The Global Methane Pledge and Glasgow Climate Pact, the Gothenburg Protocol to the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, the US-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s, and the Montreal Protocol.
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023). The Global Methane Hub is an international coordinated approach trying to strengthen methane mitigation funding.
  • Several countries have released or are building national methane action plans, and some oil and gas companies have also set methane targets (IEA 2023). For a summary of country-specific methane mitigation measures see IGSD 2023.
  • Across international and national governance mechanisms, verification of methane action is lacking (Nisbet et al. 2021).
Justice
  • Here we define justice related to approaches to slow the loss of Arctic sea ice through distributive justice, procedural justice, and restorative justice. Following COMEST (2023), we consider questions of ethics through a justice lens. Note that this is not an exhaustive list of justice dimensions and as the field advances, so will the related considerations and dimensions.
  • Distributive justice
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023) and funding is not distributed equally across sectors or geographies.
    • Methane monitoring systems are not distributed appropriately geographically (Nisbet et al. 2021)
  • Procedural justice
    • Opportunities for participation in governance of emissions reductions have increased over time. Localized actions can enable participation but can be limited by resource and capacity constraints (IPCC 2022).
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific procedural justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
  • Restorative justice
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific restorative justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
Public engagement and perception
  • A 2023 public opinion poll commissioned by the Global Methane Hub conducted in 17 countries reports that 82% of respondents support methane mitigation (GMH 2024).
Engagement with Indigenous communities
  • Unknown
International vs national jurisdiction
  • National
    • Action on methane is occurring at the national and subnational level, strengthened by international pledges, such as the Global Methane Pledge.
Existing governance
  • International
    • International collaboration is critical for action on methane. For a summary of public and private international organizations and initiatives see IGSD 2023.
    • Around 150 countries have signed on to the Global Methane Pledge. This voluntary agreement has a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% below 2020 levels by 2030. Implementation of the pledge would decrease temperatures by at least 0.2°C by 2050. The Global Methane Pledge forms a foundation to create a global methane agreement, with the Montreal Protocol providing a framework structure and approach (IGSD 2023).
    • See IGSD 2023 for a summary of potential international governance pathways including The Global Methane Pledge and Glasgow Climate Pact, the Gothenburg Protocol to the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, the US-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s, and the Montreal Protocol.
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023). The Global Methane Hub is an international coordinated approach trying to strengthen methane mitigation funding.
  • Several countries have released or are building national methane action plans, and some oil and gas companies have also set methane targets (IEA 2023). For a summary of country-specific methane mitigation measures see IGSD 2023.
  • Across international and national governance mechanisms, verification of methane action is lacking (Nisbet et al. 2021).
Justice
  • Here we define justice related to approaches to slow the loss of Arctic sea ice through distributive justice, procedural justice, and restorative justice. Following COMEST (2023), we consider questions of ethics through a justice lens. Note that this is not an exhaustive list of justice dimensions and as the field advances, so will the related considerations and dimensions.
  • Distributive justice
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023) and funding is not distributed equally across sectors or geographies.
    • Methane monitoring systems are not distributed appropriately geographically (Nisbet et al. 2021)
  • Procedural justice
    • Opportunities for participation in governance of emissions reductions have increased over time. Localized actions can enable participation but can be limited by resource and capacity constraints (IPCC 2022).
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific procedural justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
  • Restorative justice
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific restorative justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
Public engagement and perception
  • A 2023 public opinion poll commissioned by the Global Methane Hub conducted in 17 countries reports that 82% of respondents support methane mitigation (GMH 2024).
Engagement with Indigenous communities
  • Unknown
International vs national jurisdiction
  • National
    • Action on methane is occurring at the national and subnational level, strengthened by international pledges, such as the Global Methane Pledge.
Existing governance
  • International
    • International collaboration is critical for action on methane. For a summary of public and private international organizations and initiatives see IGSD 2023.
    • Around 150 countries have signed on to the Global Methane Pledge. This voluntary agreement has a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% below 2020 levels by 2030. Implementation of the pledge would decrease temperatures by at least 0.2°C by 2050. The Global Methane Pledge forms a foundation to create a global methane agreement, with the Montreal Protocol providing a framework structure and approach (IGSD 2023).
    • See IGSD 2023 for a summary of potential international governance pathways including The Global Methane Pledge and Glasgow Climate Pact, the Gothenburg Protocol to the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, the US-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s, and the Montreal Protocol.
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023). The Global Methane Hub is an international coordinated approach trying to strengthen methane mitigation funding.
  • Several countries have released or are building national methane action plans, and some oil and gas companies have also set methane targets (IEA 2023). For a summary of country-specific methane mitigation measures see IGSD 2023.
  • Across international and national governance mechanisms, verification of methane action is lacking (Nisbet et al. 2021).
Justice Here we define justice related to approaches to slow the loss of Arctic sea ice through distributive justice, procedural justice, and restorative justice. Following COMEST (2023), we consider questions of ethics through a justice lens. Note that this is not an exhaustive list of justice dimensions and as the field advances, so will the related considerations and dimensions.
  • Distributive justice
    • Action on methane is severely underfunded (IGSD 2023) and funding is not distributed equally across sectors or geographies.
    • Methane monitoring systems are not distributed appropriately geographically (Nisbet et al. 2021)
  • Procedural justice
    • Opportunities for participation in governance of emissions reductions have increased over time. Localized actions can enable participation but can be limited by resource and capacity constraints (IPCC 2022).
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific procedural justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
  • Restorative justice
    • Each individual emissions reductions pathway will have specific restorative justice concerns, which will also vary by region and country.
Public engagement and perception
  • A 2023 public opinion poll commissioned by the Global Methane Hub conducted in 17 countries reports that 82% of respondents support methane mitigation (GMH 2024).
Engagement with Indigenous communities
  • Unknown

Projects from Ocean CDR Community

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