Global Carbon Budget 2019

Global Carbon Budget 2019

Background

“Global Carbon Budget 2019” extends the budget series through 2018 with a 2019 projection, during a period of record-high emissions and intensifying policy focus on net-zero targets. Atmospheric CO2 continues to rise, crossing ~407 ppm in 2018, driven primarily by fossil fuel combustion with significant but smaller contributions from land-use change. This paper situates these trajectories within the industrial-era cumulative emissions that underpin IPCC remaining carbon budget assessments.

Goals and Methods

This study aims to provide updated, observation-constrained estimates of fossil emissions, land-use change emissions, atmospheric CO2 growth, and the land and ocean sinks for 1959-2018, plus a 2019 projection, while documenting methodological refinements. Fossil emissions are constructed from multiple datasets (CDIAC, UNFCCC inventories, BP statistics, cement process data) harmonized to produce country-level and global totals, including sectoral and bunker fuels. Land-use change emissions rely on bookkeeping models forced by updated land-use histories; atmospheric growth uses global CO2 measurements; and ocean and land sinks are estimated from global process models evaluated with targeted observational metrics, with the carbon budget imbalance used as a diagnostic.

Conclusions and Takeaways

For 2009-2018, mean fossil emissions were about 9.5 GtC yr⁻¹ and land-use change emissions around 1.5 GtC yr⁻¹, with sinks and atmospheric growth balancing within uncertainties but leaving residual semi-decadal discrepancies up to ~1 GtC yr⁻¹. Fossil emissions in 2018 reached a new high (around 10.0 GtC yr⁻¹), and cumulative emissions since 1750 totaled roughly 655 GtC. While 2019 projections suggest further growth, reinforcing the narrowing window for 1.5-2 °C-consistent pathways. For practitioners, the 2019 budget offers rigorously harmonized data for national inventories, modeling, and scenario assessment, but it also highlights that unresolved uncertainties in land-use emissions and sink variability still constrain high-precision estimates of remaining carbon budgets and verification of mitigation progress.

Reference: 

Friedlingstein P, Jones MW, O'Sullivan M, Andrew RM, Hauck J, Peters GP, Peters W, Pongratz J, Sitch S, Le Quéré C, Bakker DCE, Canadell JG, Ciais P, Jackson RB, Anthoni P, Barbero L, Bastos A, Bastrikov V, Becker M, Bopp L, Buitenhuis E, Chandra N, Chevallier F, Chini LP, Currie KI, Feely RA, Gehlen M, Gilfillan D, Gkritzalis T, Goll DS, Gruber N, Gutekunst S, Harris I, Haverd V, Houghton RA, Hurtt G, Ilyina T, Jain AK, Joetzjer E, Kaplan JO, Kato E, Goldewijk KKlein, Korsbakken JIvar, Landschützer P, Lauvset SK, Lefèvre N, Lenton A, Lienert S, Lombardozzi D, Marland G, McGuire PC, Melton JR, Metzl N, Munro DR, Nabel JEMS, Nakaoka S-I, Neill C, Omar AM, Ono T, Peregon A, Pierrot D, Poulter B, Rehder G, Resplandy L, Robertson E, Rödenbeck C, Séférian R, Schwinger J, Smith N, Tans PP, Tian H, Tilbrook B, Tubiello FN, van der Werf GR, Wiltshire AJ, Zaehle S. Global Carbon Budget 2019. Earth System Science Data. 2019;11(4):1783 - 1838. doi:10.5194/essd-11-1783-2019.