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Because the Russian economy relies heavily on exports of fossil fuels, the primary source of human-induced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it may be adversely impacted by Paris Agreement-based climate policies that target reductions in GHG emissions. Applying the MIT Economic Projection and Policy Analysis (EPPA) model to assess the impacts of the Paris Agreement on the Russian economy, this study projects that climate-related actions outside of Russia will lower the country’s GDP growth rate by about one-half of a percentage point. The Paris Agreement is also expected to raise Russia’s risks of facing market barriers for its exports of energy-intensive goods, and of falling behind in the development of low-carbon energy technologies that most of the world is increasingly adopting. The researchers argue that to address these risks, the country needs a new comprehensive development strategy that accounts for the post-Paris global energy landscape. They offer suggestions for key elements of such a strategy, including diversification of the economy, moving to low-carbon energy sources and investing in human capital development. The study simulates three simple diversification scenarios showing that redistribution of incomes from the energy sector to the development of human capital would help avoid the worst possible outcomes.

Diatoms are autotrophic siliceous unicellular eukaryotes believed to contribute ~40% of global depth-integrated marine primary production and export of organic carbon from the surface ocean. In addition to providing carbon to sustain ocean food webs they thus contribute significantly to its transfer to the deep ocean, i.e. to the biological carbon pump. Beyond the classical view of diatoms being abundant in nutrient-rich turbulent waters, observations and models both indicate their dominance in meso/submesoscale structures such as fronts and filaments, and as shade flora within the deep chlorophyll maximum. High-resolution observations and simulations, together with inferences from genomics, are changing our understanding of processes regulating and regulated by diatom diversity and abundance. Diatoms display wide variations in size, morphology, and elemental composition, all of which control the quality, quantity, and sinking speed of biogenic matter to depth. As regards carbon export diatoms are unique among the phytoplankton because of their silica shells which provide ballast to marine snow and faecal pellets. Evidence is growing that diatoms are not only efficient transporters of organic carbon to the mesopelagic layer, but can also transport it to the deep ocean. Herein we show that all diatoms are not equal, in that varying Si/C ratios and life strategies will modulate the transfer of carbon to the deep ocean. Except for the Southern Ocean, models predict a decline in the contribution of diatoms to primary production in the future ocean. However, we argue that to better predict the changes of the biological carbon pump in a warmer and acidified ocean we need to address the impacts of physical and chemical changes on diatom diversity, their interactions with other planktonic components, and their complex life histories.

When most of us think about carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, we picture smokestacks from power plants or factories. But climate policy designers see emissions not only in ephemeral gases at the point of origin, but also in tangible objects at the point of sale or trade. From their vantage point, all commercial products contain “embodied emissions” that were produced in their manufacture, assembly and transport—and these CO2 emissions must be carefully accounted for at the state or national level to ensure that border-crossing climate policies such as carbon pricing measures are effective.

To save on computation time and expense in this accounting, policymakers typically aggregate embodied emissions data by sectors such as power, transportation and agriculture. In interstate and international climate policy design, this approach is commonly used in assigning emissions reduction requirements and penalties (e.g. border carbon adjustments (BCAs)) based on energy and emissions embodied in consumption and trade. Depending on which classification system is used to define sectors, however, such aggregation could introduce significant inaccuracy into the calculation of total embodied emissions at the state or national level. This inaccuracy, in turn, could lead to biased assessments of the effectiveness and cost of interstate or international carbon emissions reduction measures.

Now a study by researchers at or affiliated with the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change explores the roots of this inaccuracy, the conditions that impact its magnitude, and aggregation strategies that policymakers can use to minimize it. Published in the Journal of Industrial Ecology, the study presents a pathway to more accurate and consistent estimates of embodied emissions—assessments more likely to inspire the confidence of signatory states and nations considering proposed emissions reduction policies, such as BCAs, that target embodied emissions.

As nations gathered in Bonn, Germany, for this year’s UN climate summit, one item on their agenda was determining whether pledged climate efforts are sufficient to achieve the targets of the 2015 Paris Agreement. Researchers at MIT have been working with the Mexican government to explore policy options that can help the country meet its international commitment of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 22 percent by 2030, compared with business as usual.

As it builds the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on the Blue Nile, one of the two main tributaries of the Nile River, Ethiopia looks forward to producing a significant amount of hydropower, which could boost regional energy security and job creation. At the same time, there’s concern that the filling of the GERD reservoir could reduce the reliability of Nile River water flowing downstream to Egypt, posing a serious risk to its economy.

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