New estimates show that for more than a decade China's greenhouse gas
emissions have been overestimated by international agencies, while the
country's energy consumption has been underestimated.
The research, published today in Nature,
shows that from 2000 to 2013 China produced 2.9 gigatonnes less carbon
than previous estimates of its culmulative emissions, meaning that its
true emissions may have been around 14% lower than calculated.
Meanwhile,
with a population of almost 1.4 billion, China's energy consumption
grew 10% faster during 2000-12 than reported by its national statistics.
As the world's biggest greenhouse gas emitter, China's recent pledge to peak its emissions by 2030 has been praised as responsible leadership
on the climate issue, but its faster-than-expected energy consumption
growth means meeting this target may present an even bigger challenge.
The
researchers, led by Dabo Guan, of UEA's School of International
Development, used independently assessed data on the amount of fuel
burned, and new measurements of emissions factors to re-evaluate
emissions of two major sources of China's carbon dioxide emissions - the
burning of fossil fuels and cement production - from 1950-2013.
Guan
said the new estimates were compiled by considering fuel quality when
establishing emissions inventories - something that had previously been
overlooked by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and
most international data sources.
"While China is the largest
coal consumer in the world, it burns much lower-quality coal, such as
brown coal, which has a lower heat value and carbon content compared to
the coal burned in the US and Europe", said Guan.
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