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Data InsightsGlobal CO2 emissions from fossil fuels are likely to increase this year, while those from land-use change will fall

Global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels are likely to increase this year, while those from land-use change will fall

Global CO2 emissions, with projections for 2025. Line chart showing historical global carbon dioxide emissions from 1850 to 2025 (projection) with three series: total emissions, fossil fuel and industry emissions, and land-use change emissions. Key insight: projected total emissions are about 43 billion tonnes in 2025, with no change from 2024; fossil emissions are about 38.9 billion tonnes, a 1 percent increase; land-use change emissions are about 4.1 billion tonnes, an 11 percent decrease, meaning the decline in land-use emissions offset the small rise in fossil emissions. Trends: all series rise slowly until the mid-20th century, then fossil and total emissions increase steeply from around 1950 to the present while land-use emissions fluctuate and decline in recent years. Axes: x-axis 1850 to 2025 (projection); y-axis labeled from 0 to 40 billion tonnes with ticks at 10 billion t increments. Footer note: projections come with uncertainty and are based on incomplete data for this year; fossil emissions do not include cement carbonation. Data source: Global Carbon Project (2025). License: CC BY.

Have global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions gone up or down this year?

The latest projections from the Global Carbon Project give us some insight. Their researchers and analysts do invaluable work in estimating greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, helping us understand how the situation is evolving.

Today, they published their latest “carbon budget”. The chart shows their historical estimates, as well as their projections for 2025.

They project that this year, emissions from fossil sources — that is, from fossil fuels and industrial processes — will increase by around 1%. Emissions from all three fuels — coal, oil, and gas — are expected to increase. Meanwhile, emissions from land-use change have decreased due to fewer extreme wildfires and reduced deforestation in South America.

This reduction in land use may offset the increase from fossil fuels, resulting in a global total similar to last year. Note that estimates for land-use emissions are much less certain than for fossil fuels.

While many countries have made progress in reducing emissions, global fossil emissions continue to rise. To tackle climate change, they need to peak and rapidly decrease in the coming years and decades.

This is based on the latest estimates from the Global Carbon Project. Explore how global and national emissions are changing.

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