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Keywan Riahi
Researcher at International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Publications - 345
Citations - 70903
Keywan Riahi is an academic researcher from International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Greenhouse gas & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 318 publications receiving 58030 citations. Previous affiliations of Keywan Riahi include Colorado School of Mines & Graz University of Technology.
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An energy vision for a planet under pressure. Transformation to sustainability: interconnected challenges and solutions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a long-term vision for the energy system and describe the elements required for the transition towards this vision, including high levels of energy efficiency and the scale up of investments in technology deployment as well as research, development and demonstration (RD&D).
Posted ContentDOI
Long-term economic benefits of stabilizing warming without overshoot – the ENGAGE model intercomparison
Keywan Riahi,Christoph Bertram,Daniel Huppmann,Joeri Rogelj,Valentina Bosetti,Anique-Marie Cabardos,Andre Deppermann,Laurent Drouet,Stefan Frank,Oliver Fricko,Shinichiro Fujimori,Mathijs Harmsen,Tomoko Hasegawa,Volker Krey,Gunnar Luderer,Leonidas Paroussos,Roberto Schaeffer,Matthias Weitzel,Bob van der Zwaan,Zoi Vrontisi,Francesco Dalla Longa,Jacques Després,Florian Fosse,Kostas Fragkiadakis,Mykola Gusti,Florian Humpenöder,Kimon Keramidas,Paul Kishimoto,Elmar Kriegler,Malte Meinshausen,Larissa P. Nogueira,Ken Oshiro,Alexander Popp,Pedro Rochedo,Gamze Unlu,Bastiaan van Ruijven,Jun’ya Takakura,Massimo Tavoni,Detlef P. van Vuuren,Behnam Zakeri +39 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new set of emissions scenarios that exclude NNCE and show that such scenarios require a more rapid near-term transformation with significant long-term gains for the economy (even without considering the benefits of avoided climate impacts).
Journal ArticleDOI
Erratum to “Energy security under de-carbonization scenarios: An assessment framework and evaluation under different technology and policy choices” [Energy Policy 65 (2014) 743–760]
Posted ContentDOI
Climate Land Energy Water nexus models reviewed across scales: progress, gaps and best accessibility practices
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review and present these models so that decision maker needing tools for analysis could identify what is best for their needs, focusing on model usability, accessibility, longevity and community support.
Wedge decomposition analysis: Application to SRES and post-SRES scenarios
TL;DR: In this article, a general methodology for displaying the gross assumptions behind any carbon emissions trajectory, relative to a reference trajectory, is introduced, and applied this methodology to a limited number of IPCC SRES scenarios.