PBL Climate Pledge NDC tool

The Paris Agreement aims to limit global mean temperature increase to well below 2 °C and to pursue efforts to limit it to below 1.5 °C. To achieve this, more than 190 Parties have submitted Nationally Determined Contributions, so-called NDCs, outlining their climate action beyond 2020. By 1 February 2024, 178 countries (including the EU and its 27 EU Member States), representing about 94% of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2019, had communicated new or updated NDCs. The PBL Climate Pledge NDC tool shows the targets in these NDCs (also including the updates) and the pledges made earlier for 2020. For 25 major emitting Parties, the tool compares these targets with greenhouse gas emission projections under current domestic climate policies up to 2030.

This page was last updated 3 April, 2024

Results: NDC emission targets and the impact of policies

Global

Share of global emissions in 2019: 100% Total emissions Emissions per capita Emissions per income

Source: PBL, 2024

Main general findings

The figure shows the impact of projected aggregated emission reductions resulting from the full implementation of most unconditional and conditional NDCs submitted to date, compared to the business-as-usual and current policy scenarios, and the least-cost 2 °C and 1.5 °C scenarios. The main findings are:

The gap is so large that governments, the private sector and local communities need to make their climate pledges more ambitious and focus on early and more stringent mitigation action. However, some countries, regions, cities and businesses have promised or implemented urgently needed climate action (Höhne et al., 2020). Closing the gap will require scaling up these few success stories and mirroring them with progress in every sector.

Progress of countries towards achieving their NDCs

The report by Nascimento et al. (2023) provides an overview of projected greenhouse gas emissions, for 25 major emitting countries/regions (map below ) up to 2030, taking into account the emission trajectories based on current policies and the implementation of NDCs. Current policy trajectories reflect all adopted and implemented policies, defined here as legislative decisions, executive orders, or their equivalent. This excludes publicly announced plans or strategies, while individual policies to implement such plans or strategies would qualify. The main findings of this study are:

Progress made by countries towards achieving their self-imposed 2030 targets of the current NDCs, under current policies.

About 12 out of the 25 major emitting countries still not on track to achieve targets set in their latest NDC targets The analysis takes into account current policy developments and considers the most recent NDC submissions as well as the impact of COVID-19 on GHG emissions. The degree to which the 25 major emitting countries are likely to achieve their latest NDC targets under current policies was found to vary:

NDCs: country classification according to type of target

In advance of the Paris meeting, almost all countries submitted their national post-2020 climate action plans and commitments, as part of their Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs). Over about 195 countries have ratified the agreement; thus, turning their INDCs into NDCs (recent submissions can be found on the UNFCC website). The following countries have not ratified the Paris Agreement: Eritrea, Libya and Yemen. When developing the tool, we assessed the mitigation components of the NDCs of 144 of these Parties (representing approximately 95% of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2019).

The mitigation components of the NDCs represent several types of targets, as summarised below (UNEP, 2015):

As of February 2024, 178 countries have submitted new NDC targets. Most of these countries have submitted the same type of NDC targets, but there are changes. For example, Saudi Arabia now has a fixed level target, and the Republic of Korea has a reduction target compared to historical base year emissions.

About the tool

The PBL Climate Pledge NDC tool addresses the following three key questions:

  1. What are the countries’ emissions projections for the NDCs for 2030?
  2. Will the projected aggregated impact of the fully implemented NDCs on global emissions, for 2030, be sufficient to achieve the target of staying well below 2 °C / 1.5 °C?
  3. Are countries on track to meet their original NDCs for the period up to 2030?

To address these questions, the tool shows the projected impact of the emission reduction proposals (NDCs) and current policies, per country and globally, on greenhouse gas emissions, up to 2030. This tool analyses the mitigation components of the NDCs of 144 of the 197 Parties (together representing about 95% of emissions in 2019). More specifically, the tool shows the effect of:

The projections show total emissions per country, emissions per capita, and emissions per unit of income. The various indicators provide countries with information on how their contribution compares to those of others.

Methodology

The impact of the most effective current and planned policies on greenhouse gas emissions up to 2030 has been projected by the NewClimate Institute, IIASA and PBL (Nascimento et al., 2023; Den Elzen et al., 2022; 2023). Current and planned policies were selected on the basis of literature research and expert knowledge. Experts involved in the ENGAGE, and ELEVATE projects reviewed the full list of policies, after which a shortlist was compiled of those expected to have the greatest impact on greenhouse gas emissions, for further quantification. The calculations by NewClimate Institute were largely based on its analyses for the Climate Action Tracker project, jointly carried out with Climate Analytics (CAT, 2023). For the calculation, existing scenarios from national and international studies were used, as well as NewClimate Institute’s own calculations of the impact of individual policies in various sub-sectors. PBL based their calculations for the current policies scenarios (all sectors, except land use) on the IMAGE model; IIASA’s projections (the land-use sector only) were based on their global land-use model GLOBIOM and global forest model G4M. Basis of the PBL calculations of the impact of climate policies is the SSP2 baseline (no climate policy), as implemented in the IMAGE model (Van Vuuren et al., 2017; Roelfsema et al., 2020; 2022). Current climate and energy policies in G20 countries, as identified in the ENGAGE, and ELEVATE projects, were added to that baseline. For countries that are part of a larger IMAGE region (Australia, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, and the EU27), emissions projections were downscaled using the country’s share in the region’s 2021 emissions as a constant scaling factor.

Land-use change accounting method: Most of the 25 analysed countries and many of the remaining countries report emission target levels that include CO2 removals from activities related to the land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF) sector. Although there are uncertainties concerning which accounting approaches and methodologies countries will apply to account for LULUCF related emissions and removals, we assume that a majority of countries will apply the net-net accounting approach, so land use emissions are included in the same way as the emissions from the other sectors (see Nascimento et al., 2023).

Quantification of the NDCs is described, in detail, in Den Elzen et al. (2022; 2023), and the quantification of the land-use targets in the NDCs is described, in detail, in Grassi et al. (2017) and Forsell et al. (2016).

Data

The GHG emissions projections were harmonised with historical 1990–2021 emissions. For most Annex I countries, the historical emissions data is based on the Greenhouse Gas Inventories submitted in 2021 to the UNFCCC (UNFCCC, 2023). For many non-Annex I countries, the historical data was taken from the most recent national reports (National Communications and Biennial Update Reports) (UNFCCC, 2021a, UNFCCC, 2021b) (when available). For details for the 25 major emitting countries, see Annex of Nascimento et al., 2023. or the other countries, we use the historical data of the PRIMAP database, in particular the 'country-reported' emissions (Gütschow and Pflüger, 2023). GHG emissions projections under current policies were harmonised to the latest historical emissions data. The harmonisation year was changed to 2021 for Annex I countries and the latest data year for non-Annex I countries.

All GHG emission figures are expressed using the 100-year global warming potentials (GWPs) from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report. For most countries, emission projections encompass all greenhouse gas emissions, including those from land use, land-use change and forestry.

To calculate the per capita and per GDP indicators, we used the population projections from the UN World Population Prospects 2022 (United Nations, 2022) and the GDP projections from the World Bank (World Bank, 2023) , UNSTAT (The United Nations Statistics Division, 2023) , and the IMF World Economic Outlook (IMF, 2023), supplemented with the projections underlying the IMAGE SSP2 scenario.

Dataset

Recommended citation

This website needs to be cited as: den Elzen, M.G.J., Dafnomilis, I., Forsell, N., Fragkos, P., Fragkiadakis, K., Höhne, N., Kuramochi, T., Nascimento, L., Roelfsema, M., van Soest, H., and Sperling, F., 2022. Updated nationally determined contributions collectively raise ambition levels but need strengthening further to keep Paris goals within reach. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, 27 (6), 33.

Acknowledgements

This study is financed by Directorate-General Climate Action (DG-CLIMA), under contract to DG-CLIMA (No. 090302/2021/854077/SER/CLIMA.C.1/REN ‘Analytical Capacity on International Climate Change Mitigation and Tracking Progress of Action’), and the ELEVATE project, financed by the Directorate General Climate Action (DG CLIMA) and EuropeAid under grant agreement No. 21020701/2017/770447/SER/CLIMA.C.1 EuropeAid/138417/DH/SER/MulitOC (COMMIT). We acknowledge and are grateful for the contributions of, and discussion with, all colleagues of NewClimate Institute and IIASA involved, in particular Detlef van Vuuren (PBL), Hanna Fekete, Niklas Höhne and Takeshi Kuramochi (all NewClimate Institute), and Nicklas Forsell (IIASA), with a special thanks to Allard Warrink (PBL) for all his work on the infographics.

Main publications

References

Authors website

Michel den Elzen, Ioannis Dafnomilis, Elena Hooijschuur and Allard Warrink (all PBL)

Leonardo Nascimento, Takeshi Kuramochi, Santiago Woollands (all NewClimate)

Nicklas Forsell, Zuelclady Araojo Gutiérrez, Gusti (all IIASA)