July 23, 2019

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New database to monitor national energy use and carbon emissions

World Input Output Database includes gross energy use, emission relevant energy use and CO2 emissions. Credit: Fotolia, Ania 2017
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World Input Output Database includes gross energy use, emission relevant energy use and CO2 emissions. Credit: Fotolia, Ania 2017

How much of the Swedish chemical industry's energy use is from renewables and how much from fuel oil? What are the global trends in fossil fuels consumption over the last decades? The new online World Input-Output Database (WIOD) environmental accounts, launched today by the European Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC), helps to answer these, and similar questions through data on the industrial and household energy use of residents in more than 40 countries and their corresponding CO2 emissions for the period 2000-2016.

Snapshots of recent trends in worldwide energy use

Covering the 28 EU countries and 15 other major economies in the world, including the United States, Japan, China, Brazil, India and a rest of the world region, the new JRC database gives us the recent trends until 2016 in worldwide energy use of their residents, such as:

Snapshots of recent trends in EU energy use

Snapshots of recent trends in CO2 emissions

Who will use the WIOD database?

Primarily targeting policy makers and researchers, the database covers global energy consumption, efficiency, energy splits and trends, as well as CO2 emissions generated in the EU and globally, with differentiation between industries and households.

It also offers easy access to a wealth of data for journalists and anyone interested in the worldwide environmental footprints of countries.

EU have been using previous versions of this WIOD environmental database for reporting on the progress achieved towards the Energy Union, as well as within the European Semester process.

Novelties in the database

The new JRC World Input-Output Database (WIOD) environmental accounts (release 2019) database is complete and consistent with the WIOD economic accounts database.

A technical report describing the methodology used accompanies the database.

The main novelties of the database are its completeness in terms of time (2000-2016) and geographical coverage (more than 40 countries) and the residence principle on which the energy uses are reported.

Monitoring energy used by country of residence, and not geographical location

Crucially, the database differs from traditional energy and emissions statistics, as it allocates energy use and emissions according to the country of residence of the user/emitter, and not the country in which it takes place.

For example, the energy use and emissions generated by Germans fuelling their cars in Luxembourg and commuting there are traditionally allocated to Luxembourg; and energy use and emissions of Danish ships moving goods from Finland to Sweden are allocated to either Finland or Sweden.

In this database, such uses are allocated to Germany and Denmark, respectively.

In this way, this complements the traditional energy statistics, balances and derived indicators, such as those used for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) reporting or the Emission Database for Global Atmospheric Research (EDGAR).

The UNFCC and EDGAR databases constitute the main reference data source for EU climate and energy policies and serve the countries to report on their and emissions targets.

Provided by CORDIS

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