"China uses more cement in 3 years than the US did in the entire 20th century".
I see this claim a lot & was curious if it stacked up against data on CO₂ emissions from cement.
So, some more back-of-the-envelope fact-checking below ↓↓
Spoiler: yes, seems to stack up
I'm using annual data on CO₂ from cement prod from @gcarbonproject & CDIAC. You can explore, compare countries, download from our CO₂ data explorer here: rb.gy/szuwvo
My calcs:
CO₂ from cement in USA for entire 20th century = 1838 million tonnes
Annual CO₂ from cement in China (2018) = 781 million tonnes
China emits same in 2.4 years as US in 20th century.
If you're curious how this stacks up with global figures.
Global CO₂ from cement (2018) = 1506 million tonnes.
China CO₂ from cement (2018) = 781 million tonnes.
So China accounts for around half.
Global CO₂ from cement over entire 20th century ~ 18,000 million tonnes.
Chinese cement CO₂ since 2000 ~ 11,000 million tonnes.
So Chinese cement emissions in 21st century so far = more than half global cement emissions in 20th century.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Terrible of the @guardian to publish this ill-informed, out-dated article on EVs.
Why does it build so much of its coverage around the climate crisis, then continually publish nonsense articles that undermine real solutions to address it?
Over its life course, the emissions of EVs are lower (how much lower depends on the electricity mix). As the world decarbonises, this will get even better.
What impact have national greenhouse gas emissions had on global warming?
A new paper by @Jones_MattW & team at @gcarbonproject quantifies each country's contribution to global mean surface temperature rise.
I've added this data to @OurWorldInData. Here are some highlights 👇
@Jones_MattW@gcarbonproject@OurWorldInData First, the team calculcates contributions to temperature rise using cumulative emissions of CO2, methane & nitrous oxide since 1850.
They convert this into carbon-dioxide equivalents using the GWP* method.
Includes emissions from fossil sources, agriculture & land use
1/