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Cross-Chapter Box 12: Residual Risks, Limits to Adaptation and Loss and Damage

… tables, based on expert judgment, depicted the potential for, and the limits of, additional adaptation to reduce risk. Near-term ( 2030 –2040) risks can be used as a proxy for 1.5°C warming by the end of the century and compared to …

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Chapter 55.2

5.2.3Risks from 1.5°C versus 2°C Global Warming and the Sustainable Development Goals

… warming at 1.5°C by the end of the century is expected to increase the chances of achieving the SDGs by 2030 , with greater potential to eradicate poverty, reduce inequality and foster equity (limited evidence, medium agreement). There are no studies …

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Chapter 55.2

5.2.1Impacts and Risks of a 1.5°C Warmer World: Implications for Poverty and Livelihoods

… expected for poor people, and inequality and vulnerability (medium evidence, high agreement). Hallegatte and Rozenberg (2017) report that by 2030 (roughly approximating a 1.5°C warming), 122 million additional people could experience extreme poverty, based on a ‘poverty scenario’ of limited …

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Chapter 5

5.2Poverty, Equality and Equity Implications of a 1.5°C Warmer World

Climate change could lead to significant impacts on extreme poverty by 2030 (Hallegatte et al., 2016; Hallegatte and Rozenberg, 2017). The AR5 concluded, with very high confidence, that climate change and …

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Chapter 55.1

5.1.1Sustainable Development, SDGs, Poverty Eradication and Reducing Inequalities

… of the present and future generations’ through balancing economic, social and environmental considerations, and then introduces the United Nations (UN) 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which sets out 17 ambitious goals for sustainable development for all countries by

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Chapter 1

1.5Assessment Frameworks and Emerging Methodologies that Integrate Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation with Sustainable Development

… the time is separated into the near-, medium-, and long-term. Near-term refers to the coming decade, medium-term to the period 2030 –2050, while long-term refers to 2050–2100. Spatial and temporal contexts are illustrated throughout, including: assessment tools that include dynamic projections …

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Cross-Chapter Box 4: Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals

… al., 2017; Maupin, 2017; Gomez-Echeverri, 2018). In September 2015, the UN endorsed a universal agenda – ‘Transforming our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development’ – which aims ‘to take the bold and transformative steps which are urgently needed to shift …

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Chapter 11.2

1.2.4Geophysical Warming Commitment

… average GMST used in this report gives an assessed likely range for the date at which warming reaches 1.5°C of 2030 to 2052. The lower bound on this range,

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Chapter 2FAQs Chapter 2

FAQ 2.1What Kind of Pathways Limit Warming to 1.5°C and are we on Track?

… that current pledges are not on track to limit global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. If current pledges for 2030 are achieved but no more, researchers find very few (if any) ways to reduce emissions after

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Chapter 22.52.5.2

2.5.2.2Investments

… the investment portfolio, implying a financial system aligned to mitigation challenges. The path laid out by countries’ current NDCs until 2030 will not drive these structural changes; and despite increasing low-carbon investments in recent years (IEA, 2016b; Frankfurt School-UNEP Centre/BNEF, 2017)[reference …

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