As you reduce the amount of carbon emissions (the y axis) the methods to keep reducing carbon cost more (the x axis.)

This great graph came to my attention from this video from vlogbrothers. It also has some good explanations of what it means.

Note that carbon capture doesn’t really make sense till you’ve exhausted all the other emission minimizing methods.

Source: https://www.edf.org/revamped-cost-curve-reaching-net-zero-emissions

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    I’m sorry but what the hell is this figure trying to say?

    Its like an inverted stacked area plot, but I’m yet to figure out how I should be interpreting it.

    A ‘beautiful’ presentation should be immediately obvious in terms of how to interpret it.

    From what I can tell, this is saying that…

    I can’t tell what the hell this is saying…

    This should not be a stacked area plot. this should be a line plot, and the data surely should not be stacked. I think its a total misrepresentation of whats going on here. These lines are not cumulative, unless you are considering some kind of optimization curve, in which case ‘cost’ should be flipped to ‘price’. But then why is that axis in giga tonnes when it states that it is in cost per metric tonne, then how is it tonnes on the Y axis? Should be dollars?

    And even then it doesn’t make sense because the scale of the y axis is backwards. if it was ‘price’, it could be reconfigured to make sense.

    Looks like something one of my students would turn in when they are just guessing on how to make a plot in excel without engaging with the material (although its clearly made in R). Remake and resubmit for half credit.

    (I’ve read the methods. This figure should be remade by swapping x and y. Y should be labeled cost per mega gram to deploy (and should be in megagrams, not gt), x should be carbon offset capacity. If this was done, it would be easily interpreted as the points and price points (in units of $/ megagram of carbon) at which a given technology becomes cost effective.)

    I know up and to the right is boring, but its intuitive and there is no need to have drawn this curve in this way.

    • @JohnDClayOP
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      4 months ago

      The video explains it pretty well. It’s very information dense. But it’s how much it costs to minimize carbon emissions by various methods depending on how many giga tones co2 we are currently emitting.

      • @[email protected]
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        84 months ago

        Just, from a data is beautiful perspective, if I have to watch a video to understand one of your figures; that ain’t beautiful.

        Its actually not a super complicated figure, the point its making is just obfuscated by its presentation.

    • @JohnDClayOP
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      04 months ago

      Giga tones co2 is pretty common from what I’ve seen in emissions documentation, I’ve never seen megagrams used for co2 before, so I thought that was reasonable.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 months ago

        “carbon capture doesn’t make sense” lol

        I mean, I’ve been in the industry for 10 years. Sure, when you are talking at a global scale, gt is what you use. The standard unit for projects is megagrams of carbon.

        • @JohnDClayOP
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          04 months ago

          Okay, since this is referring to the global co2 emissions, global scale makes sense.

          • @[email protected]
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            34 months ago

            But is it? Does it?

            No it doesn’t, not the way this is being presented. The axis need to be relabeled and rearranged to represent that. Just accept that this is a poor presentation of these data.

            • @JohnDClayOP
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              14 months ago

              The y axis is the global co2 emissions. Where are you getting that it isn’t?

              • @[email protected]
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                24 months ago

                Lol.

                No it isnt.

                Average annual emissions are 10gt per year right now.

                Y here is ‘cumulative’ carbon offset capacity (which is a bit of a misnomer because in their method you ‘stop’ doing things that are ‘cheaper’ at lower cost per unit carbon, which is like, not a good assumption to make, but we’ll stick with it for just trudging through this disaster of a figure).

                This is why data presentation matters. People who don’t know what they are talking about or how to understand these things will make the wrong conclusions.

                • @JohnDClayOP
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                  4 months ago

                  Hmm actually looks like this is only the US. The 5gt is from 2021 when it was published. Yeah that should have been more clear.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            But its not just that. Its x axis is in Mg/$.

            The figure and the thinking behind it need a complete rework. They would have been better off sticking with the original McKinsey presentation of this concept from 2007.

            They’ve made it worse.

            • @JohnDClayOP
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              14 months ago

              Looks to be like the x axis is $/ton? If the original figure is better, could you link it so I can replace the pic?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    24 months ago

                    Yes. That’s the original MAC curve the travesty you posted is supposed to represent an improvement to. It comes from Mckinsey 2007.

                    Y is cost per ton (x in the figure you presented). X is the potential reduction capacity of a given activity. Think about it like this: If Y were the price a carbon tax in Mg, the value of a tax is where a given activity becomes break even. Once carbon is ‘priced’ at a given level on Y, the activities below it on X become cost neutral/ cost savings. Negative numbers on this figure represent a real savings right now, with effectively a negative price on carbon. We should do these things right away. Positive values have a ‘cost’ associated with them (afaik, this doesn’t account for the fact that fossil fuels are subsidized). If we ‘taxed’ or put a price on carbon, the values where that line intersects and below become cost-neutral or a savings can be realized.

    • @JohnDClayOP
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      04 months ago

      I think why they’re presenting them as cumulative is because you want all the reduction methods to add to net carbon negative.