A comprehensive dataset for global, regional and national greenhouse gas emissions by sector 1970–2019

J. Minx, W. Lamb, R. Andrew, J. Canadell, M. Crippa, Niklas Döbbeling, P. Forster, D. Guizzardi, J. Olivier, G. Peters, J. Pongratz, A. Reisinger, M. Rigby, M. Saunois, Steven J. Smith, E. Solazzo, H. Tian
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F-gas emissions estimates for individual species in EDGARv5 do not align well with atmospheric measurements and the F-gas total exceeds measured concentrations by about 30 %. However, EDGAR and official national emission reports under the UNFCCC do not comprehensively cover all relevant F-gas species. Excluded F-gas species such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) or hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) are larger than the sum of the reported species. GHG emissions in 2019 amounted to 59 ± 6.6 GtCO2eq: CO2 emissions from FFI were 38 ± 3.0 Gt, CO2 from LULUCF 6.6 ± 4.6 Gt, CH4 11 ± 3.3 GtCO2eq, N2O 2.4 ±1.5 GtCO2eq and F-gases 1.6 ± 0.49 GtCO2eq. Our analysis of global, anthropogenic GHG emission trends over the past five decades (1970–2019) highlights a pattern of varied, but sustained emissions growth. There is high confidence that global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions have increased every decade. Emission growth has been persistent across different (groups of) gases. 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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract. To track progress towards keeping warming well below 2 °C, as agreed upon in the Paris Agreement, comprehensive and reliable information on anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) is required. Here we provide a dataset on anthropogenic GHG emissions 1970–2019 with a broad country and sector coverage. We build the dataset from recent releases of the “Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research” (EDGAR) for CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion and industry (FFI), CH4 emissions, N2O emissions, and fluorinated gases, and use a well-established fast-track method to extend this dataset from 2018 to 2019. We complement this with data on net CO2 emissions from land use, land-use change and forestry (LULUCF) from three bookkeeping models. We provide an assessment of the uncertainties in each greenhouse gas at the 90 % confidence interval (5th–95th percentile) by combining statistical analysis and comparisons of global emissions inventories with an expert judgement informed by the relevant scientific literature. We identify important data gaps: CH4 and N2O emissions could be respectively 10–20 % higher than reported in EDGAR once all emissions are accounted. F-gas emissions estimates for individual species in EDGARv5 do not align well with atmospheric measurements and the F-gas total exceeds measured concentrations by about 30 %. However, EDGAR and official national emission reports under the UNFCCC do not comprehensively cover all relevant F-gas species. Excluded F-gas species such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) or hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) are larger than the sum of the reported species. GHG emissions in 2019 amounted to 59 ± 6.6 GtCO2eq: CO2 emissions from FFI were 38 ± 3.0 Gt, CO2 from LULUCF 6.6 ± 4.6 Gt, CH4 11 ± 3.3 GtCO2eq, N2O 2.4 ±1.5 GtCO2eq and F-gases 1.6 ± 0.49 GtCO2eq. Our analysis of global, anthropogenic GHG emission trends over the past five decades (1970–2019) highlights a pattern of varied, but sustained emissions growth. There is high confidence that global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions have increased every decade. Emission growth has been persistent across different (groups of) gases. While CO2 has accounted for almost 75 % of the emission growth since 1970 in terms of CO2eq as reported here, the combined F-gases have grown at a faster rate than other GHGs, albeit starting from low levels in 1970. Today, F-gases make a non-negligible contribution to global warming – even though CFCs and HCFCs, regulated under the Montreal Protocol and not included in our estimates, have contributed more. There is further high confidence that global anthropogenic GHG emission levels were higher in 2010-2019 than in any previous decade and GHG emission levels have grown across the most recent decade. While average annual greenhouse gas emissions growth slowed between 2010–2019 compared to 2000–2009, the absolute increase in average decadal GHG emissions from the 2000s to the 2010s has been the largest since the 1970s – and within all human history as suggested by available long-term data. We note considerably higher rates of change in GHG emissions between 2018 and 2019 than for the entire decade 2010–2019, which is numerically comparable with the period of high GHG emissions growth during the 2000s, but we place low confidence in this finding as the majority of the growth is driven by highly uncertain increases in CO2-LULUCF emissions as well as the use of preliminary data and extrapolation methodologies for these most recent years. While there is a growing number of countries today on a sustained emission reduction trajectory, our analysis further reveals that there are no global sectors that show sustained reductions in GHG emissions. We conclude by highlighting that tracking progress in climate policy requires substantial investments in independent GHG emission accounting and monitoring as well as the available national and international statistical infrastructures. The data associated with this article (Minx et al. 2021) can be found at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5053056.
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1970-2019年全球、区域和国家各部门温室气体排放综合数据集
摘要按照《巴黎协定》的商定,要跟踪在将升温控制在2°C以下方面取得的进展,就需要关于温室气体排放(GHG)的人为来源的全面可靠信息。在这里,我们提供了1970-2019年人为温室气体排放的数据集,涵盖了广泛的国家和行业。我们根据最近发布的“全球大气研究排放数据库”(EDGAR)建立了数据集,包括化石燃料燃烧和工业(FFI)产生的二氧化碳排放、CH4排放、N2O排放和氟化气体排放,并使用一种成熟的快速通道方法将该数据集从2018年扩展到2019年。我们补充了来自三个记账模型的土地利用、土地利用变化和林业(LULUCF)的净二氧化碳排放数据。通过将统计分析和全球排放清单的比较与相关科学文献提供的专家判断相结合,我们在90%的置信区间(第5 - 95百分位)对每种温室气体的不确定性进行了评估。我们发现了重要的数据缺口:一旦将所有排放量计算在内,CH4和N2O的排放量可能分别比EDGAR报告的高10 - 20%。EDGARv5中单个物种的f -气体排放估算值与大气测量值不太一致,f -气体总量超过测量浓度约30%。然而,EDGAR和UNFCCC下的官方国家排放报告并没有全面涵盖所有相关的含氟气体种类。被排除的含氟气体种类,如氯氟烃(CFCs)或氢氯氟烃(HCFCs)大于所报告种类的总和。2019年温室气体排放量为59±6.6 GtCO2eq,其中FFI CO2排放量为38±3.0 Gt, LULUCF CO2排放量为6.6±4.6 Gt, CH4排放量为11±3.3 GtCO2eq, N2O排放量为2.4±1.5 GtCO2eq, f -气体排放量为1.6±0.49 GtCO2eq。我们对过去50年(1970-2019年)全球人为温室气体排放趋势的分析突显了一种变化多样但持续的排放增长模式。有很高的可信度表明,全球人为温室气体排放量每十年都在增加。不同(类别)气体的排放量持续增长。正如本文所报道的,自1970年以来,以二氧化碳当量计算,二氧化碳几乎占排放增长的75%,尽管从1970年的低水平开始,但f -气体的综合增长速度比其他温室气体更快。如今,f -气体对全球变暖的贡献不容忽视——尽管受《蒙特利尔议定书》管制的氯氟烃和氢氯氟烃的贡献更大,但它们并未包括在我们的估计中。此外,有高度可信度表明,2010-2019年全球人为温室气体排放水平高于此前任何十年,而最近十年温室气体排放水平有所增长。虽然与2000-2009年相比,2010-2019年的年均温室气体排放增长有所放缓,但从2000年代到2010年代的平均十年温室气体排放量的绝对增长是自20世纪70年代以来最大的,现有的长期数据表明,这是人类历史上最大的。我们注意到,2018年至2019年期间温室气体排放的变化率比2010-2019年整个十年要高得多,这在数字上与2000年代温室气体排放高速增长的时期相当,但我们对这一发现的信心不高,因为大部分增长是由CO2-LULUCF排放的高度不确定的增加以及最近几年的初步数据和外推方法的使用驱动的。虽然目前有越来越多的国家处于持续减排的轨道上,但我们的分析进一步表明,没有一个全球部门显示出温室气体排放的持续减少。最后,我们强调,跟踪气候政策的进展需要在独立的温室气体排放核算和监测以及现有的国家和国际统计基础设施方面进行大量投资。与本文相关的数据(Minx et al. 2021)可在https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5053056上找到。
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