Transcription of Industry - IPCC
1 73910 IndustryCoordinating Lead Authors:Manfred Fischedick (Germany), Joyashree Roy (India)Lead Authors:Amr Abdel-Aziz (Egypt), Adolf Acquaye (Ghana / UK), Julian Allwood (UK), Jean-Paul Ceron (France), Yong Geng (China), Haroon Kheshgi (USA), Alessandro Lanza (Italy), Daniel Perczyk (Argentina), Lynn Price (USA), Estela Santalla (Argentina), Claudia Sheinbaum (Mexico), Kanako Tanaka (Japan)Contributing Authors:Giovanni Baiocchi (UK / Italy), Katherine Calvin (USA), Kathryn Daenzer (USA), Shyamasree Dasgupta (India), Gian Delgado (Mexico), Salah El Haggar (Egypt), Tobias Fleiter (Germany), Ali Hasanbeigi (Iran / USA), Samuel H ller (Germany), Jessica Jewell (IIASA / USA), Yacob Mulugetta (Ethiopia / UK), Maarten Neelis (China), Stephane de la Rue du Can (France / USA), Nickolas Themelis (USA / Greece), Kramadhati S. Venkatagiri (India), Mar a Yetano Roche (Spain / Germany)Review Editors:Roland Clift (UK), Valentin Nenov (Bulgaria)Chapter Science Assistant:Mar a Yetano Roche (Spain / Germany)This chapter should be cited as:Fischedick M.
2 , J. Roy, A. Abdel-Aziz, A. Acquaye, J. M. Allwood, Ceron, Y. Geng, H. Kheshgi, A. Lanza, D. Perczyk, L. Price, E. Santalla, C. Sheinbaum, and K. Tanaka, 2014: Industry . In: Climate Change 2014: mitigation of Climate Change. Contri-bution of Working Group III to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Edenhofer, O., R. Pichs-Madruga, Y. Sokona, E. Farahani, S. Kadner, K. Seyboth, A. Adler, I. Baum, S. Brunner, P. Eickemeier, B. Kriemann, J. Savolainen, S. Schl mer, C. von Stechow, T. Zwickel and Minx (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, 10 ContentsExecutive Summary 74310 1 Introduction 74510 2 New developments in extractive mineral industries.
3 Manufacturing industries and services 74710 3 New developments in emission trends and drivers 74910 3 1 Industrial CO2 emissions 74910 3 2 Industrial non-CO2 GHG emissions 75310 4 mitigation technology options, practices and behavioural aspects 75310 4 1 Iron and steel 75710 4 2 Cement 75810 4 3 Chemicals (plastics / fertilizers / others)
4 75910 4 4 Pulp and paper 76010 4 5 Non-ferrous (aluminium / others) 76110 4 6 Food processing 76110 4 7 Textiles and leather 76210 4 8 Mining 76210 5 Infrastructure and systemic perspectives
5 76310 5 1 Industrial clusters and parks ( meso-level) 76310 5 2 Cross-sectoral cooperation (macro-level) 76410 5 3 Cross-sectoral implications of mitigation efforts 76410 6 Climate change feedback and interaction with adaptation 76410 7 Costs and potentials 765741741 Industry10 Chapter 1010 7 1 CO2 emissions
6 76510 7 2 Non-CO2 emissions 76710 7 3 Summary results on costs and potentials 76710 8 Co-benefits, risks and spillovers 77010 8 1 Socio-economic and environmental effects 77110 8 2 Technological risks and uncertainties 77210 8 3 Public perception 77210 8 4 Technological spillovers
7 77410 9 Barriers and opportunities 77410 9 1 Energy efficiency for reducing energy requirements 77410 9 2 emissions efficiency, fuel switching, and carbon dioxide capture and storage 77410 9 3 Material efficiency 77510 9 4 Product demand reduction 77610 9 5 Non-CO2 greenhouse gases 77610 10 Sectoral implications of transformation pathways and sustainable development 77610 10 1 Industry transformation
8 Pathways 77610 10 2 Transition, sustainable development, and investment 77910 11 Sectoral policies 78010 11 1 Energy efficiency 78110 11 2 emissions efficiency 78210 11 3 Material efficiency
9 78310 12 Gaps in knowledge and data 78310 13 Frequently Asked Questions 784742742 Industry10 Chapter 1010 14 Appendix: Waste 78510 14 1 Introduction 78510 14 2 emissions trends Solid waste disposal.
10 Wastewater .. 78710 14 3 Technological options for mitigation of emissions from waste Pre-consumer waste .. Post-consumer waste .. Wastewater .. 79010 14 4 Summary results on costs and potentials 791 References 793743743 Industry10 Chapter 10 Executive SummaryAn absolute reduction in emissions from the Industry sector will require deployment of a broad set of mitigation options beyond energy efficiency measures (medium evidence, high agreement).