Skip to main content

PublishedMay 19, 2020

Nature Climate Change Article on temporary CO2 reductions during Covid-19

PublishedMay 19, 2020

Nature Climate Change Article on temporary CO2 reductions during Covid-19


CHE partner University of East Anglia led an international team that has published a new article in the journal Nature Climate Change, outlining that the COVID-19 global lockdown has had an “extreme” effect on daily carbon emissions, but it is unlikely to last.

The study shows that daily emissions decreased by 17% – or 17 million tonnes of carbon dioxide – globally during the peak of the confinement measures in early April compared to mean daily levels in 2019, dropping to levels last observed in 2006.



Nature Article
CO2 reduction

The work, partly co-funded by the CHE project, shows that the COVID-19 crisis has highlighted the difficulty to keep track of CO2 emissions in real-time as no systems are in place to monitor global emissions in real time. Rather, emissions are reported as annual values which at times are provided years after the end of the calendar year. The paper makes use of a broad range of new data - including energy, activity and policy data - not traditionally used to track emissions to overcome this problem. This approach is unique and expands the way we think about monitoring with a potential impact on the future anthropogenic CO2 emissions monitoring and verification support capacity which is the focus of the CHE project.

The article is available here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-020-0797-x.