1. Land Use

Land Use Emissions

Dashboard for emissions from the Land Use sector in Australia. 'Mt CO₂-e' means million tonnes of Carbon Dioxide equivalent (the measurement for greenhouse gases).

Australia Total

FULL DATA

Explainer

When countries report their emissions, they're divided into sectors. Here are some key terms:

  • Fugitive emissions are released during gas, oil and coal production.
  • Industrial processes mean chemical, metal and mineral production, as well as fridges and air-conditioners.
  • Stationary energy means burning fuel for energy (e.g. gas, coal) in settings other than transport, such as power plants or buildings.

For more, click the Read more button.

Read more

Data

Australia Total

Australia

YEAR

Mt CO₂-e

v PREV YEAR

v 2005

Jun 22 -88.4 0.2% 217.9%
Sep 22 -88.4 0.1% 217.9%
Dec 22 -88.4 0.1% 217.9%
Mar 23 -88.4 0.0% 217.9%
Jun 23 -88.4 0 217.9%
Sep 23 -88.4 0 217.9%
Dec 23 -88.4 0 217.9%
Mar 24 -88.4 0 217.9%
Jun 24 -88.4 0 217.9%

Trend

Australia Total

Australia

Comparison

Australia Total

Australia

States and Territories

Data

States and Territories

Australia

STATE / TERRITORY

per 100k

Mt CO₂-e

NET

NT 0.571 1.4 309.1%
ACT -0.024 -0.109 47.2%
SA -0.538 -9.8 50.4%
Tas -2.191 -12.5 4.5%
Vic -0.226 -15.0 25.4%
WA -0.568 -15.9 23.6%
Qld -0.299 -15.9 1865.8%
NSW -0.252 -20.6 25.0%
Australia -0.340 -88.4 0.2%

Source: DCCEEW via OnlyFacts

Comparison

States and Territories

Australia

Source: DCCEEW via OnlyFacts

Trend

States and Territories

Australia

Source: DCCEEW via OnlyFacts

Emissions Revisions

REVISIONS DASHBOARD

Explainer

Australia’s reported greenhouse gas emissions are often revised in later reports. This page tracks every version of reported emissions in the quarterly inventory updates.

How to read these charts: The lines show Australia's reported emissions in million tonnes of Carbon Dioxide equivalent (Mt CO2-e). Each line represents the date they were reported. Click on the categories in the legend to deselect.

Acknowledgment: This topic was inspired by Ketan Joshi, an author and communications consultant who focuses on climate. The chart concepts below also come from him.

Trend

Emissions Revisions

Australia

News

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