Global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions (CO2) – the largest
source of man-made greenhouse gas emissions – stayed flat for the second
year in a row, according to analysis of preliminary data for 2015
released by the International Energy Agency (IEA).
"The new figures
confirm last year’s surprising but welcome news: we now have seen two
straight years of greenhouse gas emissions decoupling from economic
growth,” said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol. "Coming just a few
months after the landmark COP21 agreement in Paris, this is yet another
boost to the global fight against climate change.”
Global
emissions of carbon dioxide stood at 32.1 billion tonnes in 2015, having
remained essentially flat since 2013. The IEA preliminary data suggest
that electricity generated by renewables played a critical role, having
accounted for around 90% of new electricity generation in 2015; wind
alone produced more than half of new electricity generation. In
parallel, the global economy continued to grow by more than 3%, offering
further evidence that the link between economic growth and emissions
growth is weakening.
In the more than 40 years in which the IEA
has been providing information on CO2emissions, there have been only
four periods in which emissions stood still or fell compared to the
previous year. Three of those – the early 1980s, 1992 and 2009 – were
associated with global economic weakness. But the recent stall in
emissions comes amid economic expansion: according to the International
Monetary Fund, global GDP grew by 3.4% in 2014 and 3.1% in 2015.
The
two largest emitters, China and the United States, both registered a
decline in energy-related CO2 in 2015. In China, emissions declined by
1.5%, as coal use dropped for the second year in a row. The economic
restructuring towards less energy-intensive industries and the
government’s efforts to decarbonise electricity generation pushed coal
use down. In 2015, coal generated less than 70% of Chinese electricity,
ten percentage points less than four years ago (in 2011). Over the same
period low-carbon sources jumped from 19% to 28%, with hydro and wind
accounting for most of the increase. In the United States, emissions
declined by 2%, as a large switch from coal to natural gas use in
electricity generation took place.
The decline observed in the
two major emitters was offset by increasing emissions in most other
Asian developing economies and the Middle East, and also a moderate
increase in Europe.
More details on the data and analysis will be
included in a World Energy Outlook special report on energy and air
quality that will be released at the end of June. The report will go
beyond CO2 emissions and will provide a first in-depth analysis of the
role the energy sector plays in air pollution, a crucial policy issue
that today results in 7 million premature deaths a year. The report will
provide the outlook for emissions and their impact on health, and
provide policy makers with strategies to mitigate energy-related air
pollution in the short and long term.
(IEA/balkans.com)