Analyzing climate justice implications of the Paris Agreement by
combining future global climate and sea level modeling data with
interdisciplinary research
Abstract
The science linking anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions with our
changing climate, and the resulting impacts, has been well established
for decades. During that time one of the focal points of international
negotiations was to establish a common target for action to address
climate change. These negotiations culminated in the Paris Agreement at
COP21 in 2015 which seeks to limit the global mean surface temperature
(GMST) rise to well below 2C above pre-industrial, and to pursue efforts
to limit it to 1.5C. Our research seeks to assess the climate justice
implications of using global mean surface temperature as a metric for
climate action by combining data from ice sheet models and fully coupled
global climate model simulations in conjunction with a literature review
spanning fields including international relations, political economy,
critical geography, and history. Considering the political and
scientific history of the development of the temperature target
alongside global impacts of climate change we gain a new understanding
of spatial, temporal, and procedural aspects of climate justice.