In the news:
Trump officials likely to reverse drilling waste "methane fee" EPA is imposing - Climate cash proposal enrages developing nations - as COP presidency branded 'one of the worst' - COP29: Governments, industry must up action on methane - Inexpensive catalyst recycles methane emissions at room temperature - Turning carbon emissions into methane fuel: New method offers potential for abundant energy savings - COP29: Governments, industry must stop 'lip-service' on methane and slash emissions, says UNEP - US oil and gas firms to face federal fee for methane emissions in new EPA rule - COP29 nations approve new rules for creation of global carbon market - How oil and gas companies disguise their methane emissions - Biden imposes a new methane emissions tax as he prepares to leave the White House
Currency, capital city and methane emissions of countries
This dataset is about countries. It has 5 columns: country, currency, capital city, continent, and methane emissions. The data is ordered by population.
Preview (max 100 rows)
Columns
Download
This dataset has 194 rows and is 99% filled with values (non-null)
Filters
Use filters to adjust the scope of this dataset
Stats
Legend
There are 5 fields used in this dataset (including filters):
- Country: Name of country.
- Currency: The country's official currency.
- Capital City: Capital city of the country.
- Continent: Continent the country is situated within.
- Methane Emissions: A measure of annual emissions of methane (CH4), one of the six Kyoto greenhouse gases (GHG), from the agriculture, energy, waste, and industrial sectors, excluding LULUCF.. The measure is standardized to carbon dioxide equivalent values using the Global Warming Potential (GWP) factors of IPCC's 5th Assessment Report (AR5). Methane emissions are those stemming from human activities such as agriculture and from industrial methane production. This field is expressed in Mt of CO2 equivalent.
Details
This dataset is based on data from: SIPRI, World Bank, Reporters Without Borders
This dataset can be used under the CC BY 4.0 license