The IACC Group leads the development of tools for a new generation of “coupled” global transformation pathways that are able to represent bottom-up local constraints and opportunities at the national and sub-national scale, which is a major focus of the ECE Program.
IACC’s central goal is the development of response strategies and alternative pathways towards a low-carbon economy, taking into account the many linkages to all aspects of society and the environment. For this purpose, the IACC group develops and maintains methods, including the MESSAGEix model which is at the heart of IIASA's Integrated Assessment Modeling framework.
First, the integration of climate change impacts into the IAM framework to account for the main benefits of mitigation, that is, avoided climate change impacts which, in turn, has implications for a wide set of sustainable development objectives. Better understanding how climate impacts will affect different parts of the population, taking into account the aspects of vulnerability and equity and the degree to which affected population segments are able to adapt, will therefore be a key research focus leading to a quantification of the benefits of mitigation beyond simple economic considerations based on monetized impacts.
Second, material cycles are integrated into the IAM framework to broaden the strategy space beyond classic energy- and land-based climate mitigation strategies by including important elements of circular economy approaches. Initially, the focus is on bulk materials such as steel, cement, non-ferrous metals, or plastics, with the aim to also include important critical materials for key low-carbon technologies, such as batteries and fuel cells.
Third, with decision-making support requiring input at different levels - global, regional, national, and subnational - the integration of analysis across different spatial scales is a research focus relevant to all the previously listed topics of the IACC group, requiring further methodological and tool development. Key aspects of this challenge will be, on the one hand, increasing the spatial and temporal granularity of relevant parts of the IAM framework, and on the other, explicitly representing a wider set of policy options, for example, to develop climate action plans at the national or subnational scale.
Finally, IIASA operates a community data hub for global climate change mitigation and transformation pathways, for example, by hosting multiple key datasets for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Integrated Assessment Modeling Consortium (IAMC). These globally-focused efforts are complemented by activities that support the development of national mitigation strategies as well as sector-specific activities such as supporting the finance community in using mitigation scenarios to assess the transition and physical climate change risks of, for instance, investment portfolios.
Models, tools, datasets
Projects
Staff
News
30 October 2024
Three pathways to achieve global climate and sustainable development goals
09 October 2024
The CircEUlar project: bridging business practices and consumer behaviours in circularity
16 July 2024
Mapping global rooftop growth for sustainable energy and urban planning
Events
Groningen, The Netherlands
‘Towards Net-Zero through a Circular Economy: the consumer and business perspectives’ Stakeholder Workshop
Focus
25 September 2024
How policymakers make informed decisions for climate action
Have you ever wondered how policymakers make informed decisions for climate action? "That’s an easy one," you might say. "With science of course!" But even for scientists, understanding the world's climate is complex, and forecasting potential future developments is even more so. IIASA 2024 Science Communication Intern, Moritz Boeswirth explored this topic.
25 July 2024
Exploring circularity through science and art: CircEUlar project at the Vienna Climate Summit
The first Vienna Climate Biennale took place from April to July. CircEUlar was one of the scientific partners of the Biennale, contributing insights on the potential of circular economy strategies to combat climate change. Project coordinators Marina Jovanovic and Volker Krey reflect on the 100-day festival and the unique collaboration between science and art.
Publications
Melaina, M.W., Lenox, C.S., Browning, M., McCollum, D., Bahn, O., & Ou, S. (2024). Modeling hydrogen markets: Energy system model development status and decarbonization scenario results. Energy and Climate Change 5 e100153. 10.1016/j.egycc.2024.100153. Soergel, B., Rauner, S., Daioglou, V., Weindl, I., Mastrucci, A. , Carrer, F., Kikstra, J. , Ambrósio, G., Aguiar, A.P.D., Baumstark, L., Bodirsky, B.L., Bos, A., Dietrich, J.P., Dirnaichner, A., Doelman, J.C., Hasse, R., Hernandez, A., Hoppe, J., Humpenöder, F., Iacobuţă, G.I., Keppler, D., Koch, J., Luderer, G., Lotze-Campen, H., Pehl, M., Poblete Cazenave, M., Popp, A., Remy, M., van Zeist, W.-J., Cornell, S., Dombrowsky, I., Hertwich, E.G., Schmidt, F., van Ruijven, B. , van Vuuren, D., & Kriegler, E. (2024). Multiple pathways towards sustainable development goals and climate targets. Environmental Research Letters 19 (12) e124009. 10.1088/1748-9326/ad80af. Pachauri, S. , Coldrey, O., Falchetta, G. , & Pelz, S. (2024). Innovation in distributed energy services for sustainable development: case studies from sub-Saharan Africa. Environmental Research Letters 19 (11) e114090. 10.1088/1748-9326/ad8460. Sferra, F., van Ruijven, B. , Brutschin, E. , Ju, Y., & Riahi, K. (2024). Investigating national differences in fossil fuel phase-out strategies. DOI:10.5281/zenodo.13986071. In: IAMC 2024 Digital Poster Festival, 22-23 Octiber, 2024, online. United Nations Environment Programme (2024). Emissions Gap Report 2024: No more hot air … please! With a massive
gap between rhetoric and reality, countries draft new climate commitments. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) , Nairobi, Kenya. 10.59117/20.500.11822/46404.