As world leaders meet at COP30 in Belem, the Global Carbon Project will reveal the latest trends in global carbon emissions and the ramifications for reaching our global climate goals.
The University of Exeter, University of East Anglia and other research institutions will release the report which offers data and analysis on major emitters including China, USA, EU27, Japan and India.
The report – the 20th annual Global Carbon Budget – will offer new information on the continued high global use of coal, oil and gas fuelling our economies, as well as current rates of land-use change at country level.
The 2025 Global Carbon Budget study reports anthropogenic emissions and natural land / ocean sinks of carbon up to 2024 along with a projection for 2025, revealing the current state of the global carbon cycle and implications on future emission reductions in line with the Paris Agreement. The study will be published in the journal Earth System Science Data on Thursday 13 November.
Speakers will include:
Prof Pierre Friedlingstein FRS, Chair in Mathematical Modelling of Climate Systems at the University of Exeter
Prof Corinne Le Quéré FRS, Royal Society Professor of Climate Change Science at the University of East Anglia
Prof Julia Pongratz, Chair of Physical Geography and Land Use Systems at the University of Munic
Dr Glen Peters, Research Director at the Center for International Climate Research in Oslo (CICERO)