NDC & INDC Factsheets

NDC & INDC Factsheets

NDC & INDC Factsheets

With the conclusion of the Fiji COP23 in Bonn, November 2017, there are now 170 parties that ratified the Paris Agreement and all signed it, with only one Party indicating their wish to withdraw (the Trump administration). At the point of ratification, the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) turn into the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). Most countries went forward with keeping the INDCs as is, Morocco updated its INDC, basically adding a landuse component, and North Korea presented a new NDCs, as they hadn't submitted an INDC before.

In total, there are now 170 NDCs and INDCs covering 195 countries, who are collectively responsible for basically all of human-induced global greenhouse gas emissions.

Together with our colleagues from the Potsdam Institute's portal (www.pik-potsdam.de/primap-live/), our portal is the only one we know of that provides a comprehensive overview of all submitted NDCs and INDCs with quantification where possible. The (I)NDC factsheets are in fact a collaboration with the PRIMAP group at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. as some of our other products, like the climate spirals

Below, you will find factsheets for every individual country that submitted an NDC and/or INDC before 3rd October 2017 - as listed in the INDC and NDC registries. Check our twitter feed @ClimateCollege for update announcements.

Final note: Where a factsheet has a yellow warning sign at the top we are indicating that either we struggled to quantify that NDCs or INDCs, we found strongly mismatching data, or we encountered some other issue. That's it! Enjoy... with caution.

Malte Meinshausen & Ryan Alexander

(Authors of the Factsheets - building on a big team effort)
 

Check out individual country factsheets

Click the name of the country in the table below for individual NDC & INDC Factsheets.
You can find bulk download of our factsheets and archived previous versions here.

Also check out our other useful INDC resource:

www.mitigation-contributions.org - Our website that allows you to manipulate G20 country targets and determine what INDCs "should" be to track a least-cost trajectory within 2°C of warming.

And have a look at these great resources from other research groups: 

www.climateactiontracker.org - An in-depth analsysis site that looks at around 35 INDCs from major countries and rates them.

live.primap.org - A selection of interactive tools around INDCs and emissions scenarios from our partner group at the Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact Research.

cait.wri.org/indc/ - The Climate Data Explorer INDC analysis by the World Resources Institute.

www.unep.org/climatechange/pledgepipeline - A compilation of INDCs in an Excel table with useful collection of requested financial support data.

infographics.pbl.nl/indc/ - The PBL Netherlands INDC Pledge tool, a graphical world map with online emission series.

sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/beyond-paris - A collection of useful resources for before, during and after COP21 in Paris provided by our parent institute, the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute.

Update Log of (I)NDC Factsheets

Update log:

Updates 4th November 2016: We updated quite a number of Factsheets with up to date historical data until 2014, we included the Cancun 2020 year pledges, accounted for LULUCF credit estimtes, added the NDC of North Korea, and updated the graph's display a bit. Apologies for printing issues that occurred with some earlier versions of the Factsheets. Plus, we added a sticker "Entry-into-force" edition onto the factsheets.

Updates 14th of May 2016 version vs. 22nd April 2016 version: There were a couple of bugs in the 22nd April which we fixed. Panama provided INDC, but as there was no specified BAU level we could not quantify it.

Updates 22nd April 2016 version vs. 26th November 2015 version: New INDCs from Nepal, Malaysia, Chile, Venezuela etc. quantified. Factsheets for some countries without INDCs also provided, namely Panama, Nicaragua and Uzbekistan. Methodological update by including now full min-max range of conditional and unconditional pledges, where available.  

Updates 29th November version vs. 26th November version: New INDCs from Malaysia, Tuvalu, Jamaica etc. quantified.

Updates on 26th November version vs. 16th November version: Inclusion of all countries that submitted until 9AM, 25th November. (Sorry, Niue just came in at  11AM, we include you in the next version). Due to popular request, we included as well factsheets for international bunkers and maritime transport.

Updates in 16th November version vs. previous 30th October version version: We now include, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and other new submissions (although some of them are unquantifable). Chinese coal consumption data was updated (see background in this New York Times article)

Previous update within 30th October version: United Arab Emirates were updated and EU28 countries are analysed on a country-by-country basis.

Countries

Country (Click on name to view Factsheets) Rank of worldwide emissions 2010 Per-capita reduction (% from 2010 to 2030) Per-capita 2010 emissions (tCO2eq/cap)sort ascending
Qatar 45 10% 70.5
Trinidad and Tobago 60 16% 60.6
Brunei Darussalam 126 14% 35.9
Kuwait 48 -1% 35.9
Bahrain 91 24% 28.5
United Arab Emirates 34 -9% 27.9
Australia 16 -36% 24.6
Luxembourg 135 -48% 24.0
Oman 69 -25% 23.2
United States of America 2 -34% 22.5
Canada 11 -23% 20.7
Saudi Arabia 17 9% 19.0
Russian Federation 4 25% 18.8
Kazakhstan 30 -18% 18.8
New Zealand 63 -22% 17.8
Estonia 114 -39% 16.0
Turkmenistan 66 39% 14.9
Finland 65 -35% 14.2
Iceland 157 -59% 14.1
Libya 58 33% 14.1
Republic of Korea 13 -25% 13.7
Ireland 74 -29% 13.4
Czech Republic 43 -26% 13.2
Netherlands 37 -41% 12.8
Palau 185 -42% 12.4
Belgium 44 -37% 12.1
Equatorial Guinea 145 -31% 12.0
Malaysia 28 36% 12.0
Norway 76 -53% 11.9
Germany 8 -38% 11.8
Denmark 73 -40% 11.6
Uruguay 90 -18% 11.1
Mongolia 101 26% 11.0
Israel 61 -29% 10.8
Austria 57 -37% 10.8
Greece 47 -17% 10.6
Poland 24 -23% 10.5
Singapore 81 42% 10.4
Iran (Islamic Republic of) 10 23% 10.1
South Africa 19 -13% 10.1
Japan 6 -14% 10.1
Botswana 117 -38% 10.1
Belarus 54 10% 10.0
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 15 -38% 9.9
European Union (EU28) 3 -27% 9.6
Slovenia 121 -17% 9.5
Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) 33 14% 9.2
Ukraine 22 56% 9.1
Slovakia 84 -21% 8.6
Cyprus 141 -42% 8.5
Italy 20 -25% 8.5
Argentina 27 -3% 8.4
France 18 -36% 8.3
Bulgaria 75 -9% 8.2
China 1 32% 8.1
Uzbekistan 36 39% 8.0
Montenegro 154 -9% 7.9
Bosnia and Herzegovina 100 39% 7.9
Spain 26 -15% 7.8
Bolivia (Plurinational State of) 64 49% 7.8
Antigua and Barbuda 174 42% 7.5
Serbia 70 15% 7.4
Malta 161 -37% 7.4
San Marino 189 -19% 7.3
Paraguay 85 403% 7.3
Sweden 72 -30% 7.0
Switzerland 79 -58% 6.9
Suriname 159 34% 6.8
Bahamas 163 3% 6.8
Lithuania 115 18% 6.7
Portugal 68 5% 6.6
Hungary 71 5% 6.6
Croatia 105 3% 6.5
Liechtenstein 187 -47% 6.3
Andorra 177 -23% 6.1
Azerbaijan 78 -24% 6.1
Romania 46 11% 6.0
Barbados 168 -19% 6.0
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 134 32% 5.9
Latvia 133 17% 5.9
Mexico 12 -29% 5.7
Central African Republic 110 -22% 5.7
Turkey 23 97% 5.7
Mauritius 150 55% 5.6
Gabon 146 -13% 5.6
Lebanon 112 15% 5.6
Chile 55 18% 5.6
Namibia 136 10% 5.6
Seychelles 179 51% 5.5
Saint Kitts and Nevis 184 84% 5.2
Algeria 39 0% 5.2
Iraq 41 -6% 5.1
Brazil 7 4% 5.0
Thailand 29 32% 4.8
Guyana 158 -13% 4.7
Jordan 102 18% 4.5
South Sudan 86 -16% 4.4
Nauru 196 49% 4.4
Cuba 82 58% 4.4
Colombia 38 -49% 4.2
Cook Islands 195 24% 4.2
Niue 198 23% 4.1
Ecuador 77 -39% 3.9
Syrian Arab Republic 59 15% 3.9
Democratic People's Republic of Korea 56 29% 3.8
Panama 127 13% 3.8
Tunisia 89 44% 3.7
Angola 62 -24% 3.7
Monaco 193 -49% 3.6
Egypt 31 12% 3.6
Republic of Moldova 125 -21% 3.5
Indonesia 9 3% 3.5
Sudan 50 -16% 3.4
Peru 53 -45% 3.4
Marshall Islands 191 -48% 3.4
Mauritania 138 -1% 3.3
Jamaica 143 64% 3.3
Viet Nam 32 85% 3.2
Georgia 129 160% 3.2
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 181 10% 3.2
Dominica 188 -72% 3.2
Morocco 52 6% 3.2
Dominican Republic 97 -2% 3.2
Grenada 183 -11% 3.2
Costa Rica 124 -46% 3.2
Maldives 171 108% 3.1
Belize 172 3% 3.0
Somalia 107 -16% 2.9
Saint Lucia 180 24% 2.9
Bhutan 167 -10% 2.9
Armenia 147 104% 2.9
Samoa 178 -14% 2.8
Fiji 165 26% 2.8
Nicaragua 123 1% 2.7
Vanuatu 176 -27% 2.6
Albania 149 18% 2.6
Kyrgyzstan 130 -23% 2.5
Cambodia 96 -27% 2.3
Tonga 186 -8% 2.3
Lesotho 156 -3% 2.3
Zambia 98 -8% 2.3
Chad 106 -17% 2.3
Pakistan 25 -11% 2.3
Swaziland 162 20% 2.3
Congo 144 2% 2.2
Mali 94 42% 2.2
Honduras 122 30% 2.2
Myanmar 49 -8% 2.1
Lao People's Democratic Republic 132 -21% 2.0
Tuvalu 197 -51% 2.0
Papua New Guinea 128 22% 2.0
El Salvador 137 36% 2.0
Djibouti 169 22% 1.9
Senegal 111 25% 1.9
Philippines 40 -18% 1.9
Cabo Verde 173 26% 1.8
India 5 88% 1.8
Guatemala 108 15% 1.8
Guinea 120 -11% 1.8
Burkina Faso 103 106% 1.8
Micronesia (Federated States of) 190 -38% 1.7
Yemen 87 -33% 1.7
Madagascar 93 -47% 1.6
United Republic of Tanzania 67 -33% 1.6
Zimbabwe 116 148% 1.5
Nigeria 35 62% 1.4
Cameroon 104 94% 1.4
Gambia 164 -38% 1.4
Benin 131 13% 1.4
Guinea-Bissau 166 -5% 1.4
Niger 113 59% 1.3
Sri Lanka 109 12% 1.3
Intl. Aviation 21 28% 1.3
Mozambique 95 -13% 1.3
Eritrea 152 -2% 1.3
Kenya 80 85% 1.3
Nepal 92 -11% 1.3
Timor-Leste 170 13% 1.2
Togo 148 48% 1.2
Uganda 88 16% 1.2
Ethiopia 51 -3% 1.2
Tajikistan 140 63% 1.2
Afghanistan 99 0% 1.1
Sao Tome and Principe 192 -16% 1.0
Haiti 139 46% 1.0
Kiribati 194 -44% 1.0
Cote d'Ivoire 119 -19% 1.0
Sierra Leone 153 -24% 1.0
Bangladesh 42 68% 0.9
Comoros 175 -54% 0.9
Liberia 160 21% 0.8
Ghana 118 67% 0.8
Solomon Islands 182 -38% 0.7
Democratic Republic of the Congo 83 18% 0.7
Rwanda 151 -8% 0.6
Malawi 142 -14% 0.6
Burundi 155 766% 0.5
Intl. Maritime Transport 14 33% 0.1

Web tools and Projects we developed

  • Open-NEM

    The live tracker of the Australian electricity market.

  • Paris Equity Check

    This website is based on a Nature Climate Change study that compares Nationally Determined Contributions with equitable national emissions trajectories in line with the five categories of equity outlined by the IPCC.

  • liveMAGICC Climate Model

    Run one of the most popular reduced-complexity climate carbon cycle models online. Used by IPCC, UNEP GAP reports and numerous scientific publications.

  • NDC & INDC Factsheets

    Check out our analysis of all the post-2020 targets that countries announced under the Paris Agreement.