CO2 emissions
For Annex 1 nations, estimates through 2010 of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use and cement manufacturing are taken from the UNFCCC,[8] based on required national reports. For non-Annex 1 Countries, CO2 data is taken from the Carbon Dioxide Information and Analysis Center (CDIAC), and include emissions from fossil fuels and cement production, but not bunker fuels.[9] Data from countries not in CDIAC’s data are taken from the US Energy Information Administration or the International Energy Agency (IEA). Emissions for 2011 and 2012 are based on PBL’s estimates for growth rates by country or region.[10] Baseline emissions are projected after 2012 based on convergence from historical rates of intensity improvement to long-term (2030) rates of intensity improvement projections from McKinsey Climate Desk 2.1 (see endnote 5), combined with GDP projections described above; the full convergence algorithm is described in the technical baselines document (see endnote 7 above).
CO2 emissionsFor Annex 1 nations, estimates through 2010 of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use and cement manufacturing are taken from the UNFCCC,[8] based on required national reports. For non-Annex 1 Countries, CO2 data is taken from the Carbon Dioxide Information and Analysis Center (CDIAC), and include emissions from fossil fuels and cement production, but not bunker fuels.[9] Data from countries not in CDIAC’s data are taken from the US Energy Information Administration or the International Energy Agency (IEA). Emissions for 2011 and 2012 are based on PBL’s estimates for growth rates by country or region.[10] Baseline emissions are projected after 2012 based on convergence from historical rates of intensity improvement to long-term (2030) rates of intensity improvement projections from McKinsey Climate Desk 2.1 (see endnote 5), combined with GDP projections described above; the full convergence algorithm is described in the technical baselines document (see endnote 7 above).
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