Study: World's CO2 emissions increase
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Sep 29, 2008 -- UPI
U.S. scientists say annual carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil
fuels and manufacturing worldwide have grown 38 percent since 1992.
The analysis by the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center at Oak Ridge
National Laboratory in Tennessee shows CO2 emissions increased from 6.1
billion tons in 1992 to 8.5 billion tons last year.
"At the same time, the source of emissions has shifted dramatically as
energy use has been growing slowly in many developed countries, but more
quickly in some developing countries, most notably in Asian countries such
as China and India," the researchers said.
"The United States was the largest emitter of CO2 in 1992, followed in order
by China, Russia, Japan and India," said Gregg Marland of ORNL's
Environmental Sciences Division. "The most recent estimates suggest India
passed Japan in 2002, China became the largest emitter in 2006 and India is
poised to pass Russia to become the third-largest emitter, probably this
year."
Marland said the numbers are researchers' best estimates, but precise
numbers cannot be known with certainty. "Also, as countries with less
certain data become more important to the overall CO2 picture, the estimates
of the global total of emissions become less certain," he added.
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