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Centuries of Net-Negative Emissions Needed to Ensure a Safe Climate Future

March 11, 2026
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Two groundbreaking studies spearheaded by researchers from the Exploratory Modeling of Human-natural Systems Research Group at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) have underscored the monumental challenge of truly stabilizing the Earth’s climate in alignment with the Paris Agreement. Their findings collectively point to an urgent and multifaceted imperative: commitments to carbon dioxide removal (CDR) must not only be ambitious but sustained over centuries, far exceeding the horizons currently defined by global climate policies. These revelations demand a fundamental rethinking of climate strategy, centered on the necessity for long-term net-negative emissions to counteract persistent, delayed climate impacts.

The phenomenon of delayed climate impacts — especially sea-level rise and permafrost thaw — remains one of the most insidious yet underestimated challenges for policymakers and scientists alike. Even if global temperatures stabilize at the often-cited 1.5°C threshold, these impacts continue to intensify due to inertia within Earth’s systems. The research rigorously evaluates this lag, revealing that achieving net-zero emissions alone will prove insufficient to halt escalating damage linked to these phenomena. Instead, the evidence necessitates an extended era of net-negative global emissions that must be maintained for centuries to come.

Johannes Bednar, lead author of one of the studies, highlights the gravity of these delayed impacts by emphasizing their profound human toll. Sea-level rise threatens coastal infrastructure affecting hundreds of millions, while thawing permafrost releases significant quantities of carbon dioxide and methane, creating a feedback loop that further exacerbates climate warming. Bednar stresses that the 2025 International Court of Justice advisory opinion, which underscores state responsibility to prevent climate harm, should catalyze a shift in how emission reduction strategies are designed, steering toward sustained and large-scale carbon removal initiatives.

Artem Baklanov, coauthor, amplifies this urgency by reframing the Paris Agreement’s temperature targets. Rather than endpoints, these thresholds should be seen as interim milestones. The stabilization of delayed climate impacts requires not just holding temperatures at 1.5°C, but actively driving them below this limit over time through persistent, net-negative emissions well past the 22nd century. This perspective challenges the prevailing policy narratives and emphasizes the need for adaptive and long-term climate commitments.

Institutional and legal architectures face immense challenges in operationalizing such extended commitments—a landscape that currently lacks mechanisms capable of ensuring fairness and continuity across generations and geopolitical boundaries. Central to this is the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities, which must be translated into enforceable carbon removal obligations that endure beyond transient political cycles. The absence of robust governance frameworks creates a critical gap in global climate diplomacy and implementation efforts.

Complementing the legal and institutional analyses, a second IIASA-led study published in Nature Communications delves into the complexities introduced by Earth system uncertainties and their implications for optimal climate policy design. Common integrated assessment models often simplify or neglect these uncertainties, resulting in strategies that may underestimate the risks embedded in the natural climate response. This study innovatively integrates physical uncertainties directly into the modeling framework, illuminating how precautionary measures demand earlier and more stringent emissions targets.

The incorporation of uncertainty reshapes the economic calculus behind mitigation timelines and carbon pricing. Findings reveal that net-zero targets should be accelerated by roughly a decade compared to traditional scenarios, accompanied by substantially higher carbon prices in the near term. The rationale is clear: uncertainty mandates preparation for less favorable climate trajectories that could lead to irreversible damages unless aggressively mitigated. This advanced modeling paradigm departs sharply from conventional wisdom by compelling policy to reckon with the full spectrum of plausible Earth system responses.

Thomas Gasser, senior research scholar and lead author of the Nature Communications article, draws analogy between climate uncertainty and financial risk management. Just as income uncertainty motivates prudent spending, climate system unpredictability necessitates precaution through policies that sustain net-negative emissions potentially for centuries. The economically optimal pathway emerging from this framework anticipates long-term carbon removal not merely as an after-the-fact corrective but as an integral facet of risk hedging from the very outset.

These complementary studies converge on a powerful shared message: reaching net-zero emissions is a critical beginning, not the terminus of effective climate action. The scale and duration of net-negative emissions needed to arrest both immediate and delayed climate risks reshape the temporal and strategic horizons for global climate governance. Countries poised for economic growth beyond mid-century, yet simultaneously vulnerable to sea-level rise and permafrost thaw, acquire heightened responsibility to escalate their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and adopt explicit carbon removal targets.

Operationalizing this extended responsibility entails introducing innovative policy instruments such as Carbon Removal Obligations that legally bind nations to carbon sequestration commitments extending over centuries. Such mechanisms would institutionalize intertemporal equity, ensuring current mitigation efforts are meaningfully linked to future climate stabilization outcomes. Without these durable frameworks, the displacement between emission reduction today and climate impact realization tomorrow undermines global efforts to safeguard vulnerable populations.

Ultimately, these research findings underscore the imperative for transformative changes not just in technology and emissions reductions, but in the global institutional fabric that governs climate action. Durable, intergenerational institutions able to enforce, finance, and monitor carbon removal commitments are indispensable to aligning policy ambitions with the intransigent physics of Earth system processes. Failure to heed these insights risks locking in catastrophic and irreversible climate damages despite near-term emission reduction successes.

The IIASA studies also reinforce the vital intersection between science, law, and economics in crafting climate strategies. Legal adjudications like the International Court of Justice opinion set normative expectations for harm prevention, while economic analyses incorporating uncertain risks recalibrate optimal policy timing and intensity. This synergy offers a nuanced blueprint guiding policymakers toward climate stabilization pathways that are both scientifically robust and socially equitable.

In conclusion, the advancement of net-negative emission technologies and the political will to enshrine enduring carbon removal commitments represent humanity’s best hope to counteract persistent climate liabilities. As these IIASA-led investigations reveal, defending the planet’s future climate state demands sustained and escalating climate commitments transcending conventional policy timeframes, potentially spanning multiple centuries. This necessitates an unprecedented global effort to deploy carbon removal at scale and sustain it through resilient institutional arrangements that bridge present actions with future climate justice.


Subject of Research: Climate stabilization, carbon dioxide removal, net-negative emissions, delayed climate impacts, uncertainty in Earth system, and climate policy.

Article Title: Stabilizing time-lagged climate impacts requires net-negative emissions for centuries

News Publication Date: 26-Jan-2026

Web References:

  • Environmental Research Letters DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ae34ca
  • Nature Communications DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-69896-x

References:

  • Bednar, J., Baklanov, A., Macinante, J., Hall, J., Gasser, T., Obersteiner, M. (2026) Stabilizing time-lagged climate impacts requires net-negative emissions for centuries. Environmental Research Letters.
  • Gasser, T., Rezai, A., Cheritel, C., Baklanov, A., Obersteiner, M. (2026) Negative emissions to mitigate Earth system risks. Nature Communications.

Keywords: Climate change, carbon dioxide removal, net-negative emissions, Earth system risks, sea-level rise, permafrost thaw, climate uncertainty, climate policy, Paris Agreement, intergenerational justice, integrated assessment modeling, precautionary climate action.

Tags: challenges of net-zero versus net-negative emissionsdelayed climate impacts and sea-level riseextended carbon removal for climate safetyhuman-natural systems and climate changeinertia in Earth's climate systemsinterdisciplinary climate modeling researchlong-term carbon dioxide removal strategieslong-term climate mitigation strategiesnet-negative emissions for climate stabilizationParis Agreement carbon removal commitmentspermafrost thaw and climate policysustaining negative emissions over centuries
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