Environmental impact assessment for climate change policy with the simulation-based integrated assessment model E3ME-FTT-GENIE
J-F Mercure, H. Pollitt, N.R. Edwards, P.B. Holden, U. Chewpreecha, P., Salas, A. Lam, F. Knobloch, J. Vinuales

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel, simulation-based integrated assessment model combining macro-econometrics, technology diffusion, and climate modeling to evaluate climate policies aligned with the Paris Agreement, emphasizing socio-economic impacts.
Contribution
It presents a fully descriptive, simulation-based integrated assessment model that improves policy impact assessment by integrating economic, technological, and climate systems.
Findings
Achieves >66% probability of limiting warming to 2°C.
Creates detailed global and sectoral policy scenarios.
Demonstrates the model's capability to assess realistic policy pathways.
Abstract
A high degree of consensus exists in the climate sciences over the role that human interference with the atmosphere is playing in changing the climate. Following the Paris Agreement, a similar consensus exists in the policy community over the urgency of policy solutions to the climate problem. The context for climate policy is thus moving from agenda setting, which has now been mostly established, to impact assessment, in which we identify policy pathways to implement the Paris Agreement. Most integrated assessment models currently used to address the economic and technical feasibility of avoiding climate change are based on engineering perspectives with a normative systems optimisation philosophy, suitable for agenda setting, but unsuitable to assess the socio-economic impacts of a realistic baskets of climate policies. Here, we introduce a fully descriptive, simulation-based…
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