Content
About the statistics
Definitions
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Name and topic
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Name: Emissions to air
Topic: Nature and the environment
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Responsible division
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Division for Energy, Environmental and Transport Statistics
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Definitions of the main concepts and variables
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CO 2 equivalents: The GWP value (Global Warming Potential) of a gas is defined as the cumulative impact on the greenhouse effect of 1 tonne of the gas compared with that of 1 tonne of CO 2 over a specified period of time. GWP values are used to convert emissions of greenhouse gases to CO 2 equivalents.
Substance and GWP value
Carbon dioxide (CO 2 ): 1
Methane (CH 4 ): 25
Nitrous oxide (N 2 O): 298
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs):
HFC-23: 14 800
HFC-32: 675
HFC-125: 3 500
HFC-134: 1 100
HFC-134a: 1 430
HFC-143: 353
HFC-143a: 4 470
HFC-152a: 124
HFC-227ea: 3 220
Perfluorocarbons (PFCs):
CF 4 (PFC-14): 7 390
C 2 F 6 (PFC-116): 12 200
C 3 F 8 (PFC-218): 8 830
Sulphur hexafluoride (SF 6 ): 22 800
The national emission model includes four dimensions:
Pollutants: The different gases/substances covered by the emission model
Technical emission sources: Stoves, ships, vehicles, flares, biological and industrial processes
Industry: Standard Industrial Classification (NACE)
Commodity: Different energy commodities; solid fuels (for example coal and coke), liquid fuels (diesel oil, petrol, kerosene, heavy oil etc.), gases (natural gas, landfill gas etc.), biofuel (for instance fuel wood, wood waste, pellets) and waste (hazardous waste and other waste).
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Standard classifications
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Published tables:
Emission by source
Emission by industry (NACE)
NAMEA (NACE according to Quarterly National Accounts)
Tables used in reports to UNFCCC
This page has been discontinued, see Emissions to air, Annually.