Dear Friends/Co-sailors,
For my today's pick section, I chose the following news from 'firstpost' that points towards a highly alarming situation.
Thanks and regards,
Ranjan
===========
India’s carbon dioxide emission shoots up
7.7% in a year: study
Nov 19, 2013 Warsaw: India and China are
among the world’s biggest contributors to fossil fuel emissions with India’s
carbon dioxide discharge increasing by a whopping 7.7 percent last year, a new
study said on Tuesday.
“Based on estimates of economic activity in
2013, emissions are set to rise 2.1 percent in 2013 to reach 36 billion tonnes
of CO2,” the annual analysis by Global Carbon Project reported.
AFP “The Global Carbon Budget reveals that
the biggest contributors to fossil fuel emissions in 2012 were China (27
percent), the United States (14 percent), the European Union (10 percent), and
India (6 percent),” the group of European scientists said.
Indian CO2 emissions increased by a
whopping 7.7 percent, with those from coal growing 10.2 percent, said the
report coinciding with the UN climate talks in Warsaw, the Polish capital.
The study, led by the UK’s Tyndall Centre
for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia, said Carbon
dioxide is the principal greenhouse gas, and fossil fuels -coal, oil and gas –
along with cement production account for nearly all its man-made emissions.
China, the world’s number one carbon
emitter, accounted for 70 percent of the global increase in 2012. Chinese
emissions grew 5.9 percent in 2012, lower than the average of 7.9 percent per
year over the past decade.
Consumption from renewable sources and
hydropower in China grew by a quarter in 2012. In the United States, the
world’s No. 2 emitter, CO2 emissions fell by 3.7 percent in 2012, with those
from coal decreasing by 12 per cent as the country turned to cleaner shale gas.
Emissions by the 28-nation European Union
(EU) fell by 1.3 per cent, but emissions from coal grew 3.0 per cent. Per
capita emission is one of the biggest issues in the climate-change arena.
Developing countries like India and China
have said rich nations should bear most of the burden for warming, as they
initiated the problem and their emissions per person are much higher than those
of poorer economies.
The US is still the highest emitter per
person at 16 tonnes. By comparison an Indian’s carbon footprint is only 1.8
tonnes.
“Emissions must fall substantially and
rapidly if we are to limit global climate change to below two degrees,” Corinne
Le Qur of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research said.
The targeted emission level rise of 2.1
percent set for 2013 means burning of fossil fuels just 61 percent above the
1990 levels, the baseline year for the Kyoto Protocol, the study said.
Cumulative CO2 emissions since 1870 is set to reach 2015 billion tonnes by 2013
with 70 percent caused by burning fossil fuels and 30 percent from
deforestation and other land use changes. PTI
Source: http://www.firstpost.com/india/indias-carbon-dioxide-emmission-shoots-up-7-7-in-a-year-study-1238553.html?utm_source=ref_article
Source: http://www.firstpost.com/india/indias-carbon-dioxide-emmission-shoots-up-7-7-in-a-year-study-1238553.html?utm_source=ref_article
No comments:
Post a Comment