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Chart uses a logarithmic scale." Uploader switched horizontal and vertical axes from source's presentation, to make CO2 emissions be the dependent variable. Two trendlines added in Version 4 (2023-07-26) were separately calculated by Microsoft Excel, using separate datasets for values below versus above the $10,000 vertical line.
Chart was requested by User:Chidgk1 at the Graphics Lab Illustration Workshop; Uploader created chart manually, using Microsoft Excel to assemble the SVG code. Technical note: SVG code for charts like this can be automatically generated by the "Variable-width bar charts" spreadsheet linked at User:RCraig09/Excel to XML for SVG.
English: Bar chart of cumulative carbon dioxide CO₂ emissions by country (1850–2021) Data source: Evans, Simon Analysis: Which countries are historically responsible for climate change? / Historical responsibility for climate change is at the heart of debates over climate justice.. CarbonBrief.org. Carbon Brief (5 October 2021).
The emissions information in eGRID include carbon dioxide (CO 2), nitrogen oxides (NO x), sulfur dioxide (SO 2), mercury (Hg), methane (CH 4), nitrous oxide (N 2 O), and carbon dioxide equivalent (CO 2 e). CO 2, CH 4, and N 2 O are greenhouse gases (GHG) that contribute to global warming or climate change.
The final two columns deal with the carbon footprint of the fuel. The fourth column contains the proportion of CO 2 released when the fuel is converted for energy, with respect to its starting mass, and the fifth column lists the energy produced per kilogram of CO 2 produced. As a guideline, a higher number in this column is better for the ...
Alternatively, you can download the file to your computer, add your translations using whatever software you're familiar with, and re-upload it with the same name. You will find help in Graphics Lab if you're not sure how to do this.
Various governmental agencies involved with environmental protection and with occupational safety and health have promulgated regulations limiting the allowable concentrations of gaseous pollutants in the ambient air or in emissions to the ambient air. Such regulations involve a number of different expressions of concentration.
The data only consider carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels and cement manufacture, but not emissions from land use, land-use change and forestry [n 2] Over the last 150 years, estimated cumulative emissions from land use and land-use change represent approximately one-third of total cumulative anthropogenic CO 2 emissions. [6]