• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Jobs
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Defying expectations of a rise, global carbon dioxide emissions flatlined in 2019

February 11, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

Despite widespread expectations of another increase, global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions stopped growing in 2019, according to IEA data released today.

After two years of growth, global emissions were unchanged at 33 gigatonnes in 2019 even as the world economy expanded by 2.9%. This was primarily due to declining emissions from electricity generation in advanced economies, thanks to the expanding role of renewable sources (mainly wind and solar), fuel switching from coal to natural gas, and higher nuclear power generation. Other factors included milder weather in several countries, and slower economic growth in some emerging markets.

“We now need to work hard to make sure that 2019 is remembered as a definitive peak in global emissions, not just another pause in growth,” said Dr Fatih Birol, the IEA’s Executive Director. “We have the energy technologies to do this, and we have to make use of them all. The IEA is building a grand coalition focused on reducing emissions – encompassing governments, companies, investors and everyone with a genuine commitment to tackling our climate challenge.”

A significant decrease in emissions in advanced economies in 2019 offset continued growth elsewhere. The United States recorded the largest emissions decline on a country basis, with a fall of 140 million tonnes, or 2.9%. US emissions are now down by almost 1 gigatonne from their peak in 2000. Emissions in the European Union fell by 160 million tonnes, or 5%, in 2019 driven by reductions in the power sector. Natural gas produced more electricity than coal for the first time ever, meanwhile wind-powered electricity nearly caught up with coal-fired electricity. Japan’s emissions fell by 45 million tonnes, or around 4%, the fastest pace of decline since 2009, as output from recently restarted nuclear reactors increased. Emissions in the rest of the world grew by close to 400 million tonnes in 2019, with almost 80% of the increase coming from countries in Asia where coal-fired power generation continued to rise.

Across advanced economies, emissions from the power sector declined to levels last seen in the late 1980s, when electricity demand was one-third lower than today. Coal-fired power generation in advanced economies declined by nearly 15% as a result of growth in renewables, coal-to-gas switching, a rise in nuclear power and weaker electricity demand.

“This welcome halt in emissions growth is grounds for optimism that we can tackle the climate challenge this decade,” said Dr Birol. “It is evidence that clean energy transitions are underway – and it’s also a signal that we have the opportunity to meaningfully move the needle on emissions through more ambitious policies and investments.”

To support these objectives, the IEA will publish a World Energy Outlook Special Report in June that will map out how to cut global energy-related carbon emissions by one-third by 2030 and put the world on track for longer-term climate goals.

The Agency will also hold an IEA Clean Energy Transitions Summit in Paris on 9 July, bringing together key government ministers, CEOs, investors and other major stakeholders from around the world with the aim of accelerating the pace of change through ambitious and real-world solutions.

Dr Birol will discuss these results and initiatives tomorrow at a special IEA Speaker Series event at IEA Headquarters in Paris with energy and climate ministers from Poland, which hosted COP24 in Katowice; Spain, which hosted COP25 in Madrid; and the United Kingdom, which will host COP26 in Glasgow this year. More details on the IEA event, including how to watch a live webcast, are available here.

Source: International Energy Agency

Filed Under: Tech Tagged With: global carbon dioxide emissions

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • UMC and imec Push Silicon Photonics Into Its Next Act
  • Wizerr AI Unveils Agentic BOM Engine, Ushering Hardware Into Its Long-Awaited AI Era
  • ZincFive Secures $30 Million to Support AI-Era Data Center Resilience
  • Ply secures $8.5M to automate inventory for the trades, partners with Ferguson Ventures
  • LizzyAI Secures $5M to Rebuild the Interview From the Ground Up
  • When Open Source Meets Custom Silicon: Red Hat and AWS Shift the AI Infrastructure Game
  • Sokin Secures $50M Series B to Scale Global Payments Ambitions
  • Tutor Intelligence Raises $34M to Scale Human-Like Warehouse Robots
  • Harmonic Reaches Unicorn Status as Mathematical Superintelligence Moves Into the Real World
  • CoPlane Raises $14M: Reinventing the Most Boring — and Most Expensive — Part of Enterprise Software

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
InterAcademic.com — Where Institutions Connect and Ideas Travel Further
Salesforce Q3 FY26: Agentic AI Momentum in a Slower-Growth World
Housing Inventory Stalls as Buyers Retreat and Sellers Lose Confidence
Rio Tinto’s First Nuton® Copper in Arizona Marks a Quiet Technological Turning Point for U.S. Copper Supply
Next-Gen Nuclear Could Transform Emerging Economy Power Grids
Diamond Market, November 2025 — A Cooling Curve for Small Stones, Steady Ground for Big Gems
The Silent Monopoly: Why China’s Grip on Shipping Containers May Be the Real Strategic Risk
The China Illusion: Why Negotiating Market Access No Longer Makes Sense
The 5-to-9 Revolution: Why Side Hustles Became the New Career Fast-Track
Dassault Systèmes & Mistral AI: Europe Starts Building Its Own AI Backbone
RWS Earns CMMC Level 2 — A Quiet but Significant Shift in Defense-Grade AI
Cloudflare’s Rapid Response Shows Why the Internet Still Trusts It
Apple and Google Issue Fresh Wave of Cyber Threat Alerts Worldwide
Helmet Security Raises $9M to Secure the Hidden Plumbing of Agentic AI
7AI Raises Record $130M Series A to Lead the “Agentic Security Inflection Point”
Check Point Earns Leader Position in 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Email Security
CyberMarketingCon 2025, December 7–10, Austin, TX
NTT DATA Launches AI-Powered Cyber Defense Centers Across India, UK and US
USX Cyber Expands Guardient with Native JAMF Log Ingestion for Deeper macOS Security
Salt Security Extends Its Shield to MCP Servers Inside AWS

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
Morphography — A Visual Language for the Next Era of AI
Netflix’s $83B Grab for Warner Bros. & HBO: A Tectonic Shift in Global Media
Clipbook Raises $3.3M Seed Round — And the PR World Just Got a Warning Shot
BrandsToShop.com — the right domain to have for Cyber Monday, Black Friday and every loud shopping season ahead
PressEspresso.com
NcodiN Secures €16 Million to Scale Optical Interposer Technology and Break the Copper Wall
OPINT.com — Where Understanding Becomes Power
AppCoding.com — A Clear, Flexible Identity at the Center of the Software-Everywhere Economy
APIcoding.com — A Digital Asset Aligned With the Infrastructure of the Modern Software Economy
NewsInstances.com — A Digital Identity Built for Event-Driven Media and AI-Generated Reporting
4YFN26, 2–5 March 2026, Fira Gran Via — Barcelona
DLD Munich 26, January 15–17, Munich, Germany
SPIE Photonics West 2026, January 17–22, San Francisco
Gurobi Decision Intelligence Summit, October 28–29, 2025, Vienna
MIT Sloan CFO Summit, November 20, 2025, Cambridge
Roblox Expands the Future of Creation at RDC 2025
Apple Announces WWDC25, June 9 to 13, 2025
Adobe Summit 2025, March 17-20, Las Vegas
Embedded World 2025, from 11 to 13 March 2025 in Nuremberg
SATELLITE 2025: Uniting the Global Satellite and Space Communities

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains