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The drop in emissions, while positive, must be viewed in context. It represents a decrease over only one year and may not be representative of the trend over a longer period
Professor Jacqueline McGlade, Executive Director of the EEA
The EEA has taken the decision to release the main messages of the report early because of growing public and political interest in the issue of climate change.
The key points of the report are:
Which sectors are mainly responsible for the GHG cuts?
In absolute terms, the main sectors contributing to emissions reductions between 2004 and 2005 in the EU-15 were public electricity and heat production, households and services, and road transport.
Emissions from public electricity and heat production decreased mainly due to a reduction in the reliance on coal. The reduced emissions from households and services have to be further analysed, but appear to be due to climatic conditions. The decrease in emissions from road transport has also to be further analysed, but appears to be a combination of reduced fuel consumption and increased use of diesel cars.
Which countries show the biggest decreases in GHG emissions?
Germany, Finland and the Netherlands contributed most to the EU-15 reduction.
The EEA compiles this report annually using information reported by national governments under the EC GHG Monitoring Mechanism.
The report contains domestic GHG emissions data from 1990 to 2005 for the EU-15 and the EU-27. Domestic, in this context, refers to emissions from within each Member State, which are then added up to give an EU total. The data may be subject to change up to May 2007 as a result of initial checks by the UNFCCC secretariat and updates by EU Member States, however, the main trends outlined will not change.
What is the significance of this report in the context of the Kyoto Protocol?
Official reporting of emissions for compliance purposes under the Kyoto Protocol does not begin until 2010 – when emissions will be reported for 2008. In the meantime, this report is the most accurate inventory of greenhouse gas emissions for the EU and can be used to track progress towards Kyoto targets.
The EU-15 has a common target to reduce GHG emissions by 8 %, compared to the base year* using domestic reductions (cutting emissions from each Member State) as well as Kyoto mechanisms (EU Member States invest in emissions reductions initiatives outside the EU in return for credits). This inventory report suggests that domestic emissions of GHGs decreased by approximately 1.9 % compared to the base year under the Kyoto Protocol.
(*The base year for most greenhouse gases under the Kyoto Protocol is 1990 for the EU-15, but some Member States use 1995 as the base year for fluorinated or 'F-gases', one of the so-called greenhouse gases)
When will the final GHG inventory report be published?
The EEA will not publish more information on the EU GHG emissions situation until mid-June, 2007.
What is the EU-27
EU-27: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom.
What is the EU-15?
EU-15: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom.
For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./highlights/eu-greenhouse-gas-emissions-drop-in-2005 or scan the QR code.
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