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| general:trends:emission_trends_bc [2026/02/10 16:42] – [Table] vosen | general:trends:emission_trends_bc [2026/02/26 15:18] (current) – vosen | ||
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| ====== Emission Trends BC ====== | ====== Emission Trends BC ====== | ||
| - | Germany reports Black Carbon (BC) emissions for all years from 2000 onward. The main sources are transport as well as mobile and stationary combustion. Germany uses the EMEP/EEA 2016 Guidebook to estimate BC emissions, augmented by some country specific emission factors, i.e. split factors for the BC portion of PM< | + | Germany reports Black Carbon (BC) emissions for all years from 2000 onward. The main sources are transport as well as mobile and stationary combustion. Germany uses the EMEP/EEA 2016 Guidebook to estimate BC emissions, augmented by some country specific emission factors, i.e. split factors for the BC portion of PM< |
| - | {{ : | + | Between 2000 and 2024, **Total Black Carbon |
| - | {{ : | + | |
| - | ===== Main drivers ===== | + | |
| - | Between | + | The main drivers are the **transport emissions (NFR 1.A.3)** with 70% of total 2000 emissions, |
| + | Over the entire time series, more than 90% of the transport emissions come from **Road Transport (NFR 1.A.3.b)**. The overlying trend towards more diesel cars in the German fleet slowed the decrease in emission over this period (see figure below). | ||
| - | The main drivers are the **transport emissions (NFR 1.A.3)** with 70% of total 2000 emissions, and a 85% reduction between 2000 and 2023. | + | 24% of the 2000 total emissions result from **Other Sectors (NFR 1.A.4)**, mostly from residential stationary combustion and mobile sources therein, with a 62% reduction between 2000 and 2024. |
| - | Over the entire time series, 90% of the transport emissions come from **Road Transport (NFR 1.A.3.b)**. The overlying trend towards more diesel cars in the German fleet slowed the decrease in emission over this period (see figure below). | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | 24% of the 2000 total emissions result from **Other Sectors (NFR 1.A.4)**, mostly from residential stationary combustion and mobile sources therein, with a 56% reduction between 2000 and 2023. | + | |
| __Table: Black Carbon emissions 1990-2024, in kilotonnes [kt]__ | __Table: Black Carbon emissions 1990-2024, in kilotonnes [kt]__ | ||