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Notes
Climate Data 101: Source Acronyms
About Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs)
The Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) Scheme (formerly known as the Emissions Reduction Fund) registers projects that reduce emissions or store carbon in soils and vegetation. There are methodologies that determine the rules and eligible activities for running an ACCU Scheme project. You can read about the ACCU Scheme methods here.
ACCU Scheme methods
About Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF)
CO2 in the atmosphere can be reduced ‘by taking advantage of the fact that atmospheric CO2 can accumulate as carbon in vegetation and soils in terrestrial ecosystems’ (Source: UNFCCC). Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change any process, activity or mechanism which removes a greenhouse gas from the atmosphere is referred to as a ‘sink’. LULUCF refers to human activities that impact terrestrial sinks. LULUCF is the most variable emission sector in Australia’s greenhouse gas accounts. It is subject to fluctuations and revisions as estimates and methodologies vary between different datasets. The Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research has a useful explanation on why it does not include LULUCF in global emissions data.
PRIMAP-hist
Climate Data 101: What’s Mt CO2-e?
FAQ: Why is the world emissions data different from Australia’s national emissions data on this site?
Our data source for global emissions (PRIMAP-hist) does not include Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF).
Climate Data 101: Units of Measurement
Climate Data 101: Net vs Gross Emissions
Climate Data 101: Greenhouse Gas symbols
Understanding Australia’s total emissions data
This site brings together multiple datasets. Sometimes, that leads to different totals in different places. A good example of this is Australia’s total emissions. We track Australia’s emissions by sector, industry, and state and territory. Each of these result in a ‘total’ emissions for that category. The best place to view Australia’s total emissions is by sector. This is because sector emissions are updated more often (quarterly).
Go to total sector emissions