Bottom-up estimates of deep decarbonization of U.S. manufacturing in 2050
Worrell, Ernst; Boyd, Gale
(2022) Journal of Cleaner Production, volume 330, pp. 1 - 15
(Article)
Abstract
The world needs to rapidly reduce emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) emission to stave off the risks of disastrous climate change. In particular, decarbonizing U.S. manufacturing industries is particularly challenging due to the specific process requirements. This study estimates the potential for future CO2 emission reductions in this important sector.
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The analysis is a detailed accounting exercise that relies on estimates of emission-reduction potential from other studies and applies those potentials to the manufacturing sector using a bottom-up approach. The actions are grouped into four “pillars” that support deep decarbonization of manufacturing (DDM): Energy Efficiency, Material Efficiency, Industry-Specific, and Power Grid. Based on this bottom-up approach, the analysis shows that an 86% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from the Reference Case is feasible. No single pillar dominates DDM, although opportunities vary widely by sub-sector. The analysis shows that a strategy incorporating a broad set of elements from each pillar can be effective instead of relying on any single pillar. Some pillars, such as Energy Efficiency and Material Efficiency, have wide applicability; others have key niche roles that are Industry-Specific; the Power Grid pillar requires interaction between grid decarbonization and industry action to switch from fossil fuels to zero-carbon electricity where appropriate.
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Keywords: Climate change mitigation, Decarbonization, Electrification, Energy efficiency, Material efficiency, Renewables, Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment, Environmental Science(all), Strategy and Management, Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
ISSN: 0959-6526
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Funding Information: The research described in this paper is funded, in part, by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), Office of Atmospheric Programs, Climate Protection Partnerships Division, ENERGY STAR for Industry through contract 68HE0H18A0003 to ICF Incorporated, L.L.C. Earlier drafts have benefited from comments by Chris Bataille, Bruce Bremer, Beth Conlin, Matt Doolin, Elizabeth Dutrow, Danny Macri, Josh Smith, Carolyn Snyder, and Walt Tunnessen. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for the extensive comments and suggestions. Those comments and insights helped to significantly improve the paper. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Government, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, or of ICF Incorporated, L.L.C. Any errors and omissions are the sole responsibility of the authors. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors
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