Abstract
The 2015 Paris Agreement outlined the goal to limit temperature increases below 2°C, preferably to 1.5°C. In response, several countries have announced net-zero emission pledges (NZEP). The credibility of these pledges varies because countries have committed to different target years. Moreover, some pledges outline sectoral as opposed to economy-wide targets and vary in how they monitor progress. To assess the pledge’s credibility, we create a novel NZEP stringency score. We find that climate leaders with a higher share of renewable energy in final energy consumption are more likely to have announced more stringent NZEPs. However, economic development, the size of the economy, countries’ embeddedness in international environmental treaties, and the robustness of domestic civil society are not associated with NZEP stringency.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference39 articles.
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5. Private institutions like KPMG have attempted to systematically assess the stringency of NZEPs such as by creating the “Net Zero Readiness Index 2021.” The report identifies 103 NZEP indicators and covers 32 countries. This leaves out the remaining 98 countries in its analysis.
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7 articles.
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