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IEA publishes carbon dioxide emissions analysis

Published by , Editor - Hydrocarbon Engineering
Hydrocarbon Engineering,


The International Energy Agency (IEA) has published detailed analysis of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fuel combustion, less than four weeks before the start of the COP21 United Nations negotiations on climate change in Paris.

The new data show that CO2 emissions related to the energy sector, which is the source of nearly two thirds of human generated greenhouse gases, rose 2.2% in 2013 to total 32.2 Gt, compared with the 0.6% increase in 2012. Both years were below the average growth rate since 2000 of 2.5%. In absolute terms, global CO2 emissions increased by 0.7 Gt in 2013.

Preliminary assessment for the World Energy Outlook Special Report on Energy and Climate published in June estimated that global energy-related CO2 emissions were flat in 2014.

The new IEA analysis of the official 2013 data shows that emerging economies’ emissions grew 4%, largely because of increased coal consumption, while there was no change in emissions by more developed countries that include most IEA members. Two thirds of global emissions came from just 10 countries, divided equally between emerging and more developed economies, with China and the US alone accounting for 14.1 Gt of CO2.

On a per-capita basis, however, China’s emissions were just over two fifths of those of the US, though the countries are moving in opposite directions, as the new IEA data find that US per-capita emissions fell 16% from 1990 while China’s tripled as its gross domestic product per capita surged.

Access the latest IEA analysis of global CO2 emissions from fuel consumption here, and the IEA excerpt Key Trends in CO2 Emissions here.


Adapted from press release by Rosalie Starling

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/the-environment/04112015/iea-publishes-carbon-dioxide-emissions-analysis-1685/

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