Ready for some good news from our latest data release? While emissions are still rising overall globally, concentrations of emissions vary widely across sectors and regions. For example, a few countries are making significant progress on reducing emissions from deforestation, where climate progress has a lot to gain from natural carbon sequestration. In the Amazon and Congo basins, emissions from tropical deforestation fell more than 20% in 2023 compared to 2022. In Colombia, emissions from forest clearing, fires, and degradation dropped more than 40% between 2022 and 2023. Visit ClimateTRACE.org to learn more about how emissions are changing over time, and take a look at 2024 emissions data.
关于我们
Climate TRACE (Tracking Real-time Atmospheric Carbon Emissions) is a global coalition of nonprofits, tech companies, and universities created to make meaningful climate action faster and easier by independently tracking greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions with unprecedented detail and speed. We harness satellite imagery and other forms of remote sensing, artificial intelligence, and data science expertise to identify human-caused GHG emissions when and where they happen. Coalition members include Blue Sky Analytics, CarbonPlan, Earthrise Alliance, Hudson Carbon, Hypervine, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, OceanMind, RMI, TransitionZero, WattTime, and climate leader and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. For more information, please visit: https://climatetrace.org/.
- 网站
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https://www.climatetrace.org/
Climate TRACE的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 环境服务
- 规模
- 11-50 人
- 总部
- Planet Earth
- 类型
- 非营利机构
- 创立
- 2020
地点
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主要
US,Planet Earth
Climate TRACE员工
动态
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In Azerbaijan last week, Climate TRACE co-founders Al Gore and Gavin McCormick shared the COP29 stage and highlighted critical findings from our latest data release. In Al Gore’s opening remarks, he highlighted a collection of recent and tragic climate-fueled natural disasters and asked the question, “when will we decide that we don’t want to keep paying to clean up and try to heal the consequences and deal with the causes instead?” As COP29 comes to a close — and as 2024 shapes up to be the hottest and highest-emitting year on record — we invite you to take note of the many opportunities available to reduce emissions at scale. Watch the full presentation on our YouTube channel: https://lnkd.in/gY5epUir
Al Gore and Gavin McCormick unveil unprecedented Climate TRACE emissions data at COP29
https://www.youtube.com/
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On Friday at COP29, we released our latest global emissions inventory and highlighted all of the new layers of data on the Climate TRACE platform. But what does the data say about the climate crisis and pollution? ?? Emissions have yet to peak. In 2023, emissions rose 0.7% compared to 2022, and we expect them to rise again in 2024. ?? Pollution is consistently concentrated in regions with lower socioeconomic status, showing clear climate inequities with damaging impacts to the health of communities and the planet. ?? Underreporting of emissions continues. Emissions inventories are largely out-of-date and undercounting emissions. For example, for the fourth year in a row, Climate TRACE data show that oil and gas emissions from production and transport are three times higher than what is reported. Read more about the key findings in our press release: https://lnkd.in/gcd8D3kg
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It’s here! The newest Climate TRACE dataset is live on ClimateTRACE.org. It remains the most comprehensive GHG emissions inventory globally, and the list of new data points and categories of information has grown immensely since last year. With the new data, you can now access: ??2023 and 2024 emissions data? ??Emissions estimates from over 660 million assets ??Emissions estimates from key non-GHG pollutants, including carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, PM 2.5, and more ??Monthly emissions data from 2021 into 2024 ??City-, province-, and state-level emissions inventories ??Emissions data from 10 sectors and 67 subsectors These data are free and openly available to anyone with internet access. So what do the data show? In 2023, global emissions reached 61.15 billion tonnes CO2e, making it the highest emitting year on record, up 0.7% from 2022. Visit ClimateTRACE.org/explore to search your country, city, industry, or local facility and learn more about global emissions. https://lnkd.in/gcd8D3kg
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WattTime.org is hiring for two roles to support the Climate TRACE coalition. Learn more about the openings for a Data Scientist and Technical Project Manager below, and please share these opportunities with your network.
We are hiring! We are looking for two incredible people to fill roles in support of our work with Climate TRACE. ?? Technical Project Manager: https://lnkd.in/g8GNEvmv ?? Data Scientist: https://lnkd.in/gkqYKeVs If you or someone you know would be a good fit, please invite them to apply and share these openings with your networks. Climate TRACE is a global coalition of organizations tracking emissions at the source. Learn more about Climate TRACE by visiting their website, ClimateTRACE.org.
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This week, Climate TRACE co-founders Al Gore and Gavin McCormick will be in Baku, Azerbaijan, sharing insights from the latest Climate TRACE data with world leaders at COP29. If you are in Baku this week, join them in the Blue Zone, Zone D on Friday, November 15th at 10:30 AM AZT. The presentation will take place in Plenary 1: Nizami. “You no longer should be thinking that emissions can hide,” said McCormick during last year’s conference of the parties in Dubai, UAE. Our work to bring radical transparency to emissions data continues, and we are excited to share how we have expanded the information available on the free and open Climate TRACE platform. Stay tuned as we go live with the newest dataset, including emissions data from over 660 million individual assets. Tune in to the event live at 10:30 AM AZT here: https://lnkd.in/gHTC_RrA
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If you're in Baku, please join our side event on Satellites, AI and other tech-based open access tools that are helping countries, cities, subnational governments and companies meet their transparency goals. We're bringing together a superb panel of speakers: TJ Conway (RMI), Lisa Hanle, Golestan (Sally) Radwan (UN Environment Programme), Olia Glade (Greenhouse Gas Management Institute), Sassan Saatchi (CTrees), Kenzie Huffman (Carbon Mapper) and Molly White - whose orgs are at the forefront of making it easier to gather and estimate GHG emissions.
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In order to reduce Scope 3 emissions, organizations need to have access to transparent supply chain data. While this has been a difficult task, it is being made easier with the help of AI and multi-stakeholder collaboration. We’re working with Open Supply Hub on a pilot project to integrate Climate TRACE emissions data into their global supply chain database of 745,000 factories and production sites. In order for these data to be effective in driving emissions reductions, organizations need to utilize supply chain insights to make strategic changes in procurement decisions. Thanks to The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation for hosting a roundtable to explore how these data insights can be made actionable.
#Artificialintelligence (AI) is creating new pathways for civil society, governments, and private sector actors to both understand where emissions are coming from and move the needle on global #decarbonization. Our partners at Climate TRACE and Open Supply Hub are leading the way, leveraging #ai to provide openly accessible, granular #data across sectors and industries, and improve supply chain transparency and sustainability at scale. According to Open Supply Hub Founder and CEO Natalie F. Grillon, the success of their efforts depends on "buy-in from industry leaders and other supply chain stakeholders, and we’re committed, as always, to building?with, not?for, our users.” For more information on their efforts, as well as insights from top sustainability experts, check out my recent blog post, now available on The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation's Medium page:
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Ahead of the 2025 deadline for submitting updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) or national climate commitments, the Inter-Parliamentary Union has published a 10-step guide for strengthening those climate commitments. Their guidance includes the following: 1. Establish a baseline 2. Put people front and center 3. Scrutinize for quality 4. Ensure alignment with national policies 5. Monitor alignment with international commitments 6. Strengthen legal and institutional frameworks 7. Reinforce implementation and oversight with sufficient funding 8. Track and report 9. Promote timely and inclusive NDC updates 10. Empower and unite Parliaments can access country-level emissions data to establish baselines and measure progress on the free and open Climate TRACE platform.
#Parliaments must urgently raise their ambitions to lower global temperatures. To help them, the #IPU has released a new guide for #MPs, "10 actions for stronger national climate commitments." The guide provides detailed background on Nationally Determined Contributions (#NDCs). As part of the IPU's climate campaign, #Parliaments4thePlanet, the new guide explains NDCs and what actions parliaments must take ahead of the NDC submission deadline in February. ipu.org/10NDCs ASU Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Laboratory Amanda Ellis Marianne Gilchrist