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INDICATORS


GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS


MITIGATION


ADAPTATION


TRANSITION TO A LOW-CARBON ECONOMY


CLIMATE FINANCE


CLIMATE AND WEATHER


NGFS INDICATORS


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9TH STATISTICAL FORUM


ABOUT CLIMATE INDICATORS DASHBOARD



Climate Change Indicators Dashboard
Bridging the data gap on climate change for evidence-based economic
decision-making

 * Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions
   
   GHG Emissions Accounts
   National Inventories and Targets
   CO2 Emissions Intensities and Multipliers
   Carbon Footprints from Economic Activity
   

 * Mitigation
   
   Environmental Taxes
   Environmental Protection Expenditures
   Fossil Fuel Subsidies
   Renewable Energy
   Trade in Low Carbon Technology
   Forest and Carbon
   

 * Adaptation
   
   Climate-related Disasters Frequency
   Climate-driven INFORM Risk
   IMF-Adapted ND-GAIN Index 
   

 * Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy
   
   NEW NGFS Transition Pathways
   NEW NGFS GDP Losses and Benefits
   Forward-Looking Risks
   Trade in Low Carbon Technology
   Renewable Energy
   

 * Climate Finance
   
   Green Debt
   Carbon Footprint of Bank Loans
   
   

 * Climate and Weather
   
   Surface Temperature Change
   Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations
   Change in Mean Sea Levels
   Land Cover Accounts
   




LATEST UPDATES



CHART OF THE WEEK BLOG


Benefits of Accelerating the Climate Transition Outweigh the Costs



NEW DATASET: NGFS INDICATORS


The bespoke scenarios developed in Phase 4 of the NGFS scenarios are generated
by state-of-the-art well-established integrated assessment model.




DATA UPDATE: GREENHOUSE GAS (GHG) EMISSIONS


Global GHG Emissions Increased Marginally in the Second Quarter of 2023



FEATURED INDICATORS

Here you’ll find example indicators, with data driven visualizations showing how
global economic activity is affecting the climate and what governments are doing
to mitigate these impacts.





GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS INCREASED MARGINALLY IN THE FIRST QUARTER OF
2024

Millions of metric tons of CO2 equivalent - Seasonally adjusted

Quarterly global Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions increased by 2.5 percent in the
first quarter of 2024, an acceleration from a 0.6 percent increase in 2023Q4 and
the largest quarterly increase since the last quarter of 2024. According to the
latest UNFCCC reports the best estimate of temperature change is 2.5-2.9°C and
there is an agreement that net zero CO2 emissions are the prerequisite for
halting warming at any level. It will be necessary to closely monitor the
emissions to ascertain whether or not the countries can build further on the
clean energy momentum towards significant overachievement of the latest NDCs,
helping to attain emission levels suggested for keeping warming likely below
2°C.



Related indicators




ADVANCED ECONOMIES MAINTAIN COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE IN EXPORTS OF LOW CARBON
TECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS

VALUES FOR 2021

THIS MAP SHOWS THAT ADVANCED ECONOMIES MAINTAINED THEIR COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE IN
EXPORTING LOW CARBON TECHNOLOGY (LCT) PRODUCTS IN 2021. LOW-CARBON TECHNOLOGY
PRODUCTS ARE PRODUCTS THAT FEATURE TECHNOLOGY ADAPTED TO A LOW-CARBON ECONOMY,
SPECIFICALLY TECHNOLOGY THAT REDUCES GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS. THESE INCLUDE
WIND TURBINES, SOLAR PANELS, AND CARBON CAPTURE EQUIPMENT.

A VALUE GREATER THAN ONE (>1) INDICATES A RELATIVE ADVANTAGE IN EXPORTS OF LOW
CARBON TECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS, WHILE A VALUE OF LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO ONE (≤1)
INDICATES A RELATIVE DISADVANTAGE.



Related indicators




CARBON FOOTPRINT OF BANK LOANS VARIES SIGNIFICANTLY ACROSS COUNTRIES

Tons CO2 /Million $US


Transition towards a low carbon economy brings along risks to the financial
industry. Banks provide loans in response to the funding needs of various
sectors. The Carbon Footprint of Bank Loans (CFBL) captures the exposure of
banks to transition risk in a cross-country comparable way.

The CFBL is a country-level indicator, constructed as the average of CO2
emission intensities/multipliers from the fuels burned in each sector, weighted
by the sectoral share of outstanding domestic loans from banks.

This graph depicts the carbon footprint of bank loans around the world. The
higher the ratio, the greater the carbon intensity of banks’ domestic loans
portfolio.





Related indicators




ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES AS A SHARE OF GDP AVERAGED 1.7% IN 2020


Percent of GDP

ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES AS A SHARE OF GDP AVERAGED 1.7% OF GDP ACROSS REPORTING
COUNTRIES IN 2020, IN PART DUE TO THE DECLINE IN REVENUES FROM GASOLINE TAXES
BECAUSE OF LOCKDOWNS IN RESPONSE TO COVID 19. THIS IS SLIGHTLY DOWN FROM THE
HIGH REACHED IN 2005, WHEN ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES AS A SHARE OF GDP SAT AT 1.8%.

ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES ARE DIVIDED INTO FOUR TYPES: (1) TAXES ON ENERGY, INCLUDING
FUEL FOR TRANSPORT; (2) TAXES ON TRANSPORT, EXCLUDING FUEL FOR TRANSPORT; (3)
TAXES ON POLLUTION; AND (4) TAXES ON RESOURCES.

AN ENVIRONMENTAL TAX IS A CHARGE LEVIED ON A PHYSICAL UNIT OF AN ITEM THAT HAS A
PROVEN NEGATIVE IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT. A GALLON OF PETROL, A PASSENGER
FLIGHT OR A TON OF WASTE BOUND FOR LANDFILL ARE EXAMPLES OF SUCH PHYSICAL UNITS.
ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES SHOW HOW GOVERNMENTS AROUND THE WORLD ARE RESPONDING TO
CLIMATE CHANGE THROUGH TAXATION.




Related indicators


IN COLLABORATION WITH OTHER INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, THE IMF HAS IDENTIFIED
AND DEVELOPED A RANGE OF DISTINCTIVE INDICATORS THAT DEMONSTRATE THE IMPACT
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY IS HAVING ON CLIMATE CHANGE. THESE INDICATORS HAVE BEEN
GROUPED INTO SIX CATEGORIES: GREENHOUSE GAS (GHG) EMISSIONS, MITIGATION,
ADAPTATION, TRANSITION TO A LOW-CARBON ECONOMY, CLIMATE FINANCE, AND CLIMATE AND
WEATHER.



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