A Human Development Framework for CO2 Reductions
Lu\'is Costa, Diego Rybski, and J\"urgen P. Kropp

TL;DR
This paper proposes a framework linking human development and CO2 emissions, estimating necessary emissions for developing countries to reach high HDI levels while maintaining global warming limits.
Contribution
It introduces a novel development-based CO2 reduction framework that accounts for human development progress in climate policy planning.
Findings
High correlation between HDI and per capita CO2 emissions.
Estimated 300Gt CO2 needed for developing countries to reach high HDI by 2050.
Projected global emissions range from 850 to 1100Gt CO2 to stay within 2°C warming limit.
Abstract
Although developing countries are called to participate in CO2 emission reduction efforts to avoid dangerous climate change, the implications of proposed reduction schemes in human development standards of developing countries remain a matter of debate. We show the existence of a positive and time-dependent correlation between the Human Development Index (HDI) and per capita CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion. Employing this empirical relation, extrapolating the HDI, and using three population scenarios, the cumulative CO2 emissions necessary for developing countries to achieve particular HDI thresholds are assessed following a Development As Usual approach (DAU). If current demographic and development trends are maintained, we estimate that by 2050 around 85% of the world's population will live in countries with high HDI (above 0.8). In particular, 300Gt of cumulative CO2…
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