Carbon dioxide (CO2) Facts on Telegram by GRT : the true behind global greenhouse gas emissions / planet pollution – Telegram
In 2022, the largest absolute contributions to global fossil CO2 emissions were from China (31 %), the USA (14 %), India (8 %), and the EU27 (7 %). These four regions account for 59 % of global fossil CO2 emissions,

Growth rates for these countries from 2021 to 2022 were 0.5 % (China), 0.5 % (USA), −1.6 % (EU27), and 5.8 % (India), with +0.9 % for the rest of the world. The per capita fossil CO2 emissions in 2022 were 1.3 t C per person per year for the globe and were 4.1 (USA), 2.2 (China), 1.7 (EU27), and 0.5 (India) t C per person per year for the four highest emitters (Fig. 5).

Cumulative fossil CO2 emissions for 1850–2022 were 477 ±
25 Gt C, including the cement carbonation sink (Fig. 3, Ta- ble 8, with all cumulative numbers rounded to the nearest 5 Gt C). In this period, 46 % of global fossil CO2 emissions came from coal, 35 % from oil, 15 % from natural gas, 3 % from decomposition of carbonates, and 1 % from flaring.

Over the entire period 1850–2022, US cumulative emissions amounted to 115 Gt C (24 % of world total), the EU’s to 80 Gt C (17 %), China’s to 70GtC (15%), and India’s to 15GtC (3%).

Global fossil CO2 emissions were slightly higher, 0.9 %, in 2022 than in 2021, with an increase of less than 0.1 Gt C to reach 9.9 ± 0.5 Gt C (including the 0.2 Gt C cement carbona- tion sink) in 2022 (Fig. 5), distributed among coal (41 %), oil (32 %), natural gas (21 %), cement (4 %), flaring (1 %), and others (< 1 %). Compared to the previous year, 2022 emis- sions from coal and oil increased by 1.6% and 3.2%, re- spectively, while emissions from gas and cement decreased by 2.2 % and 5.1 %, respectively.

Global increases in 2023 emissions per fuel type are projected to be +1.1 % (range −0.1 % to 2.4 %) for coal, +1.5 % (range 0.6 % to 2.3 %) for oil, +0.5 % (range −0.9 % to 1.8 %) for natural gas, and 0.8 % (range −0.7 % to 2.4 %) for cement.

For China, projected fossil emissions in 2023 are expected to increase by 4 % (range 1.9 % to 6.1 %) compared with 2022 emissions.
And the loser is? 🇺🇸 America, 🇨🇦Canada BUT ESPECIALLY 🇷🇺 Russia, who is doing NOTHING! to improve!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/MissionWillowProject/172

For 🇮🇸 Iceland, we still need to remember 🌋 and a region, that need to import all thing from 🇪🇺 ... plus there is no train ...

🇩🇪 Germany instead has no excuses!
Let we check few of the "worst countries" for high CO2 related to the amount of people. China has mid-low values, but 📈 ...

We can still see that Iceland and Norway are pretty irrelevant, plus remember what we wrote https://news.1rj.ru/str/PollutionFacts/1085, so for Nordic countries is more difficult to move from one location to another ...

This is not the case for Canada, Germany, USA, Australia and arab countries! where they "are the main problem" of our planet ... near other countries like Japan, India, etc.