The 2021 report reveals that countries' fossil fuel production plans remain dangerously out of sync with the limits consistent with the Paris Agreement.
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The 2021 report reveals that countries' fossil fuel production plans remain dangerously out of sync with the limits consistent with the Paris Agreement.
A study in Environmental Research Letters finds that 16 US subsidies could increase the expected profits of new oil and gas fields by 55% and 68%.
Two tax incentives alone increased the expected value of new oil and gas projects by as much as $20 billion in some years.
In a letter submitted to the District Court of The Hague, SEI Senior Scientist Peter Erickson criticizes a Shell-commissioned report on oil and gas production.
This paper looks at the implications for a shared effort to align global fossil fuel production with climate limits.
This paper finds that the gas industry in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia is vulnerable to sustained, low prices of domestic gas and natural gas liquids.
The report considers the impact of COVID-19 on the gap between countries’ planned fossil fuels production and the levels needed to limit global warming.
Further investments in oil and gas infrastructure – including new oil sands projects – are increasingly risky given market trends and fundamentals
This article in Nature explains how subsidies affect fossil fuel investment and why they deserve greater attention in global modelling analyses.
This report is the first assessment of the gap between Paris Agreement goals and countries’ planned production of coal, oil and gas.
This guide for local governments describes when and how to use a consumption-based emissions inventory, known as a CBEI.
This working paper outlines three principles that can inform debate on an equitable phase-out of U.S. fossil fuel extraction.
This paper finds that California could reduce global emissions substantially if it joined a growing list of governments that limit oil production.
This article outlines why it is important that Parties to the Paris Agreement explicitly address the phasing out of fossil fuel production under the UNFCCC.
Current and future oil sands projects may contribute to a long-term global oversupply of oil, slowing the necessary low-carbon transition outside Canada.