|
Subject Areas
Carbon Cycle
Climate
Coastal Sensitivity to Sea Level Rise
Energy and Socioeconomic Systems
Land-Use and Ecosystems
Oceanic Trace Gases
Solar and Atmospheric Radiation
Trace Gas Emissions
Vegetation Response to CO2 and Climate
Fossil-Fuel CO2 Emissions
Atmospheric Trace Gas Measurements
Terrestrial Carbon Management
France (including Monaco) Fossil-Fuel CO2 EmissionsTrendsThe fossil-fuel CO2 emissions history of France is striking in that emissions have declined since 1979. France's emissions since 1979 reflect modest decline in petroleum use and marked decline in coal use. Fossil-fuel CO2 emissions in 1950 were 82% from coal. By 2006, only 13.5% of emissions were from coal consumption. Carbon dioxide emissions from petroleum products have declined 32% since 1979 but still account for 59.9% of France's 104 million metric tons of carbon released due to fossil-fuel combustion and cement production for 2006. France continues to increase use of natural gas. In 2006, CO2 emissions from natural gas consumption reached 25 million metric tons of carbon or 23.7% of France's total emissions. France made a major commitment to nuclear power, and nuclear power generation grew rapidly from ca. 1975 until it contributed 76% of total electricity generation in 1987. France is a net exporter of electricity. Extensive use of nuclear power has clearly curtailed fossil fuel-related CO2 emissions from France. Per capita emissions have declined steadily since the 1970s to present levels near 1.7 metric tons per French person. CITE AS: Boden, T.A., G. Marland, and R.J. Andres. 2009. Global, Regional, and National Fossil-Fuel CO2 Emissions. Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge, Tenn., U.S.A. doi 10.3334/CDIAC/00001 |
| Home | ORNL | Security Notice | Webmaster |