Top 10 Polluting Countries by CO2 Emissions (1840-2021)

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  • čas přidán 25. 12. 2021
  • Which countries contribute the most to global warming and carbon emissions? This animation video will compare the top 10 countries by CO2 emissions from 1840 to 2021. As the Industrial Revolution raged starting in the 17th century, countries have been emitting more CO2 as factories replaced farms. Global temperatures are projected to rise between 2 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit.
    Sources: Our World In Data, climate.gov, and many other articles
    Music: Uranus by Holst

Komentáře • 277

  • @user-yx4yc2vk8k
    @user-yx4yc2vk8k Před 2 lety +7

    I knew you wouldn't disappoint me, you are really a legend, keep it up and I'm the first to support you

  • @captaindata452
    @captaindata452 Před 2 lety +25

    It's amazing how this channel inspires me on a regular to work harder on my statistics channel.
    Watching channels like this gives me a massive internal drive to produce as good charts as this one.
    Thank you for igniting💥 my journey and stay blessed❤

  • @leszekandzel
    @leszekandzel Před 2 lety +5

    I would like to ask - Poland was not officially existing in 1864, nor 1900, so why do you place it on your chart? How did you calculate the borders of Poland in 1915?

  • @jackiepaper101
    @jackiepaper101 Před 2 lety +173

    If you look at per capita numbers you get a much different story. China drops way down the list, Canada is in the top 10.

    • @winstonchurchill5516
      @winstonchurchill5516 Před 2 lety +25

      Canada had like four million people in 1890 but was in the top 10 like wtf.

    • @mattmatt9733
      @mattmatt9733 Před 2 lety +21

      Exactly it would be so much more relevant to show it per capita and reveal that the most developped countries are the most polluting ones

    • @corrupt1user
      @corrupt1user Před 2 lety +24

      Per capita the US isn't in the top 10. Luxemburg is more than 2x as much as the US per capita, along with a bunch of Caribbean and Gulf states. It's not a great comparison though, for the simple reason that the US and Europe's pollution is itself masked by outsourcing all the heavy, dirty industries to India and China (and performing them in the cheapest way possible, AND shipping them 10,000 miles using the filthiest fuels known to man). Really, the absolute best way to reduce pollution is to eat locally grown foods and to design products to last as long as possible. I mean, it's astounding just how much TVs have advanced, but is it really necessary to get a new TV every 5 years?

    • @MichaelSchmack
      @MichaelSchmack Před 2 lety +9

      Negative - it's about total pollution not by person.

    • @belkYT
      @belkYT Před 2 lety

      @@winstonchurchill5516 800*

  • @ozone2031
    @ozone2031 Před 2 lety +19

    *Everyone: How reduce our CO2 emission ?
    *Uranium: allow me to introduce myself

    • @Stellar_Insights_
      @Stellar_Insights_ Před 2 lety +5

      Sun and wind : huh kid😏

    • @jarskil8862
      @jarskil8862 Před 2 lety

      @@Stellar_Insights_ Sun and Wind cannot guarantee stable production.
      Sun and wind will always be only a help for Fossil fuels or Nuclear power.

    • @Stellar_Insights_
      @Stellar_Insights_ Před 2 lety +2

      @@jarskil8862 nuclear power plants can literally ruin a city if destroyed

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety

      Nuclear power is the fastest route to achieve near zero or zero CO2 emissions from power production. Also, it will provide a steady, regular supply of power to electrical grids already overtaxed due to decarbonization and increased electrical vehicle use.
      If your willing to deal with the waste honestly and effectively it really is the way to go for now.

    • @hootowl6354
      @hootowl6354 Před 2 lety +1

      I like nuclear but nuclear is EXPENSIVE. And we sure as hell need some safer designs. There are also lots of places where solar, wind, tide, etc. makes a lot of sense. There's no need to rely on any one source.

  • @52flyingbicycles
    @52flyingbicycles Před 2 lety +14

    You can tell when a country enters recession when their emissions go down quickly. The most dramatic examples were WW2 and the Great Leap Forward

    • @johnkingsize
      @johnkingsize Před 2 lety +5

      Transition from fossil fuel to nuclear also translates into stark drops although there are signs of good economy.

  • @lennysmom
    @lennysmom Před 2 lety +3

    I enjoy looking at these, but I’d like know the music that accompanies..this is from The Planets?

  • @BeeStats
    @BeeStats Před 2 lety +3

    Nice

  • @nikolaysokolnikov2677
    @nikolaysokolnikov2677 Před 2 lety +21

    Proland produced more co2 emitions in 1850s then Spain and Austria despite not being a country at the time?

    • @nphzjk3746
      @nphzjk3746 Před 2 lety +1

      Maybe they dont know that Poland dont exist on that time

    • @maggotfeast
      @maggotfeast Před 2 lety +3

      Factories inside the current Polish border existed, which at the time would be in Germany, Russia and Austria-Hungary.

    • @gorgilovesbasketball8251
      @gorgilovesbasketball8251 Před 2 lety +5

      It’s based off modern day borders it’s very dumb

    • @robertkowalski7932
      @robertkowalski7932 Před rokem

      @@gorgilovesbasketball8251 Nonsense. What borders of Poland before 1918, what in 1920, what 1921-1939, what 1939-1945?

    • @blcheah2672
      @blcheah2672 Před rokem

      I don't think this is unfair, even though Poland was not independent. They were pretty industrialized at that time. If not for all the wars being fought on their soil, Poland would almost certainly be rich and have lots of cars and Co2 emissions.

  • @TheGreenSweater
    @TheGreenSweater Před 2 lety +1

    @RankingCharts, could you look at the interaction between CO2 emissions and GDP in the top 10 GDP countries?

  • @baxter6574
    @baxter6574 Před 2 lety +48

    As always and great chart, very useful and educational. I’m curious how the pre-1950 numbers are calculated or their sources? I guess they are from studies compiled over the years.

    • @Coconut31
      @Coconut31 Před 2 lety +4

      I need the same info. Where are the sources ?

    • @RankingCharts
      @RankingCharts  Před 2 lety +21

      You can find the data on ourworldindata.com

    • @karthikrox6310
      @karthikrox6310 Před 2 lety +4

      most likely coal + other petroleum fuels utilisation / mined data was used to estimate

    • @MB-hs2yc
      @MB-hs2yc Před 2 lety +4

      I'm wondering how they measured CO2 emission in mid 19th century?

    • @METIXPLAY
      @METIXPLAY Před 2 lety +1

      @@MB-hs2yc maybe by counting temperature over the world for this years, like more emissions the higher temperature

  • @sarchmaster5779
    @sarchmaster5779 Před rokem +4

    It would be interesting to see the total volume over time, not just the per year volume. Both are interesting though.

  • @Broekmanium
    @Broekmanium Před 2 lety +19

    Really curious for some data on how much of this is actually for products used in own country. E.g. China is top rank for sure, but a lot of that is also for export. That would be quite a hard to aquire dataset though, and would require looking at full import/export stats for countries.

    • @Jake-rs9nq
      @Jake-rs9nq Před rokem

      It's not as much as you think. Only about 20% of emissions are related to producing exports. Most is for electricity production.

    • @hovera7946
      @hovera7946 Před rokem

      @@Jake-rs9nq who told u that? cnn?

    • @skyisreallyhigh3333
      @skyisreallyhigh3333 Před rokem

      @@Jake-rs9nq Lots of that electricity is used to produce junk for the world

    • @Jake-rs9nq
      @Jake-rs9nq Před rokem

      @@hovera7946 No, China releases data on their energy consumption. Independent studies also back this up. Look it up instead of crying about CNN.

    • @Jake-rs9nq
      @Jake-rs9nq Před rokem

      @@skyisreallyhigh3333 Nowhere near the majority. It's mostly for domestic heating, appliances, lighting, etc. There's over a billion people in China after all. And their standard of living has risen exponentially in the past few decades.

  • @user-ch9my3to6j
    @user-ch9my3to6j Před 2 lety +24

    great video, however i wonder how were the older data based on, such as for example that poland does not exist before 1918, so was their emission calculated out of prussian territories? russian ones? austrian? combined? then that would mean such that the german emission would be calculated without accounting in their emission in their former territories that is now poland? that is rather rather confusing for thos who is willing to think a step further

    • @plarteey1316
      @plarteey1316 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah I was wondering the same thing although I could see him refer to krakow but that was annexed by Austria in 1846 so I’m just hoping he updates the list in the future

  • @djheidi-beate4838
    @djheidi-beate4838 Před 2 lety +11

    It would be interesting if you also linked the co2 balance to size per %

    • @hanslund308
      @hanslund308 Před rokem

      Not fair when some nations are placed in cold climate

  • @meghraj28
    @meghraj28 Před rokem +3

    Could you please make a video on CO2 emissions per capita or energy consumption per capita?

  • @G0TIMAN
    @G0TIMAN Před 2 lety +7

    What do you mean by "poland" in 1840? A polish kingdom as a part of russia? Emission of co 2 on teritory of future Second Polish Republic? Or current Third one?

    • @user-lz9po8xi4n
      @user-lz9po8xi4n Před 2 měsíci

      Польша не только была в составе России , но и в составе Германии и Австро-Венгрии.

  • @doggo2995
    @doggo2995 Před 2 lety +1

    Should of added world total column. Still great video I see decreases starting!!

  • @theinfotainer3451
    @theinfotainer3451 Před 2 lety

    Hi, its been a long while since i have been on your channel, how are you? You channel's looking good!

  • @crucesignatidlr
    @crucesignatidlr Před rokem +1

    Awesome work, China. Catching up on that Anglo-Saxon dominance.

    • @Lin-fp2yf
      @Lin-fp2yf Před rokem

      Thinking about per capita 😂

  • @ulysseschang129
    @ulysseschang129 Před rokem +2

    What about per-capita?

  • @wachtwoorden2
    @wachtwoorden2 Před 2 lety +8

    Noone gonna mention how long Belgium was in top 10 for so long??

    • @ozone2031
      @ozone2031 Před 2 lety +2

      Belgium was in the core of the Industrial Revolution with very rich coal and iron deposit

    • @wachtwoorden2
      @wachtwoorden2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ozone2031 It's still amazing they were able to keep a head as long as they did though?

    • @Vivi-mf3fh
      @Vivi-mf3fh Před 2 lety

      Is Belgian Congo and African mining count for emissions?

    • @wachtwoorden2
      @wachtwoorden2 Před 2 lety

      I don't think so, even so it wouldn't make a significant difference

  • @TG-cj5yq
    @TG-cj5yq Před 2 lety +4

    The US China numbers are funny in the 2000s. I bet you could rank the amount of jobs being outsourced to China and it would be similar

  • @rpe7884
    @rpe7884 Před 2 lety +1

    Wo haben sie die Statistik CO2 Ausstoss im 19. Jahrhundert her ? Errechnet ?

  • @frozen1762
    @frozen1762 Před 2 lety +2

    Poland didn't exist in 19c as an independent nation. If you count this by present day borders the stat is useless.

  • @erdc22ssjjjsjjsj
    @erdc22ssjjjsjjsj Před 2 lety

    please make a video on number of unicorns chart

  • @TweekLudwig
    @TweekLudwig Před 2 lety +13

    The US lowered in emissions during 2020 because of lockdown, I assume?

    • @r6nr373
      @r6nr373 Před 2 lety +5

      Correct

    • @jarskil8862
      @jarskil8862 Před 2 lety +3

      @@r6nr373 Also because USA started driving down coal powerplants during Trump.
      There was in news how USA "accidently" lowered more emissions than my country pollutes in total :D

    • @TweekLudwig
      @TweekLudwig Před 2 lety +2

      @@jarskil8862 Well if that's true (which anybody can research, I just woke up and have to go into work), that's the other answer I was expecting that we actually did something to switch power sources, so good on the US, I suppose

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +3

      Between 2010 and 2019, 290 coal fired power plants have been closed in the US. As of 2019, 241 plants were still online. This amounts to a shuttering of roughly 40% of coal fired power capacity.
      Conversion to natural gas due to the fracking boom and the lower cost of renewable power as well as the Obama administrations executive order dated the 19th of March, 2015, all contributed to this. Of course, if your legacy lives by "executive" order, it will die in the same way.
      The share of coal-fired electricity in the United States is now about the same as nuclear and renewable power and falling. Many of these remaining coal power plants are only operated seasonally or at peak demand times.
      A city to the north of me (Duluth) had a coal power plant operated by Minnesota Power, equipped with the latest scrubbing technology, won awards from the states pollution control agency as a model plant for reducing emissions. It's now closed I think but oddly enough at the same time high sulfur content in the snow during winter was evident, the level was not falling. A expert was quoted as saying it came from China.

    • @alimurtaza6318
      @alimurtaza6318 Před 2 lety +2

      Or maybe people just stopped breathing in 2020......
      Oh that got dark really fast

  • @glennmitchel7139
    @glennmitchel7139 Před 2 lety

    How the hell do you find Swedens CO2 emmision data from 1840?

  • @GuyFromTheSouth
    @GuyFromTheSouth Před rokem +2

    *Sends all polluting factories to China*
    "We are gonna stop gIobal warming. Look at how much CO2 emissions have gone down in our country!"
    *China laughing all the way to the bank*

  • @RL_Twelve
    @RL_Twelve Před 2 lety +17

    I just hope people also thinking in the population before seeing the numbers. Totally understable China, USA and India on the top, we can expect China emiting the same than the Vatican + knowing China is producing most of the goods in the world.
    And I'm not a fanboy or random chinese defensor its just common sense xD there is so much desinformation about this

    • @MrNeuroMind
      @MrNeuroMind Před 2 lety +2

      actually there is no desinformation bro xd

    • @eyeswydeshut359
      @eyeswydeshut359 Před 2 lety

      As the US population increases, our emissions drastically decrease. China's emissions increase no matter what because they don't care.

  • @pralkatv3485
    @pralkatv3485 Před 2 lety

    The question, what is doing Poland in statistis in the years of not exististing in maps?

  • @samatha1994
    @samatha1994 Před 2 lety

    Interesting, though more interesting would be per person within a country.

  • @billrich9722
    @billrich9722 Před rokem

    Okay... How did they measure emissions from 1840?

  • @robertkowalski7932
    @robertkowalski7932 Před rokem +1

    Nonsense. How was Poland's emission calculated before 1918, like 1939 - 1945, within what limits, when there were no Polish borders?

  • @tamulemon
    @tamulemon Před 2 lety +2

    Per capita, per capita, per capita! The graph is so flawed without per capita data

  • @diomedesx2535
    @diomedesx2535 Před 2 lety +2

    Russia had by far the largest population in Europe during the 19th century yet for most of it they aren't even cracking the top 10....gives you a pretty good insight into the nature what passed for an economy in that country.

    • @1337Skrjabinn
      @1337Skrjabinn Před rokem +4

      Russia had not industrialized until 1930-s, yes.
      For most of 19th century it didn't have an urge to reform and industrialize because it had a lot of natural resources and agricultural exports.
      And it lost 10+ years in 20th century due to ww1 and commies.
      It would not be fair to compare Russia to early industrialized european countries like UK, Belgium, France, Germany. Those countries lived in a world of rough competition between each other that urged them to innovate. Meanwhile Russia didn't have any rivals that could threaten it's existence so it lagged behind in terms of innovation because innovation was not crucial for russia's existence like it was to countries in western europe.

    • @diomedesx2535
      @diomedesx2535 Před rokem +1

      @@1337Skrjabinn Russia also had a very different socio-political climate where serfdom existed across a huge percentage of the population deep into the 1800's - 4+ centuries after it had largely vanished from Western Europe. It was still a medieval society and their economic set up reflected that.

    • @Codex7777
      @Codex7777 Před rokem

      Russia had a large and rapidly growing industrial economy well before ww1. The problem was that large areas of the country weren't industrialised and the majority of the population was still agrarian. ww1 actually stimulated industrialisation but they still struggled to supply their vast army. They hadn't had an agricultural revolution either and the war further disrupted supply, causing worse food shortages than normal. The war, revolution, civil war and economic embargo and invasion by the major capitalist powers all made things even worse. Once the civil war had been won and the invasions beaten back, communist Russia actually industrialised and urbanised extremely rapidly. Agricultural production too, after initial disastrous mistakes, increased rapidly due to modernisation. It was doing pretty well until ww2 devastated the country on an unimaginable scale and received no outside aid afterwards...
      Russia was much more industrially productive before ww1 than people think. Not as much as NW Europe or North America but it was getting there and was still ahead of the rest of the World. As for post-revolution Russia, for all it's many flaws in it's system, it industrialised and modernised incredibly quickly, despite incredible obstacles to such progress, much faster than was happening pre ww1. Stalinism was bloody awful but you can't pretend that it didn't achieve some amazing things at the same time. Any military dictatorship is doomed to failure in the long term. Even Gorbachev's reforms 'could' have worked, if they'd been brought in slowly... and had begun 15 or 20 years earlier, lol.

  • @xjsnjkil2070
    @xjsnjkil2070 Před 2 lety +1

    you should do it per capita.

  • @sticktwiddler9028
    @sticktwiddler9028 Před 2 lety +1

    Maybe members of Extinction Rebellion should be made to watch this before the plan their next demonstration in the UK.

  • @Nasgaaroth
    @Nasgaaroth Před 2 lety +8

    So why UE is pushing Poland so much to close all coal mines and industry? Push Germans maybe?

    • @jarskil8862
      @jarskil8862 Před 2 lety +3

      Germany has zero right to do Green moralizing.
      Largest coal plant in Germany pollutes more than my whole country. Still Germans are just building more coal power to replace the nuclear power they are driving down... -_-

    • @Nasgaaroth
      @Nasgaaroth Před 2 lety +1

      @@jarskil8862 this is what we see from the end of graph. Germany is on the top from UE.

  • @anon-san2830
    @anon-san2830 Před 2 lety +3

    GOD DAMN USA YOU HAVEN'T LET ME READ ANY GRAPHS FOR THE LAST ONE HUNDRED YEARS!

  • @robertkowalski7932
    @robertkowalski7932 Před rokem +1

    The countries of Europe and North America have reduced harmful emissions - they are moving production to Asia and Africa.

  • @sungsooonfire2813
    @sungsooonfire2813 Před rokem

    south korea very proud of it!!!

  • @johnchen7541
    @johnchen7541 Před 2 lety

    Make a video of add up CO2 1840 to 2022

  • @donderstorm1845
    @donderstorm1845 Před 2 lety +1

    mind sharing the name of the music piece? @RankingCharts

    • @RankingCharts
      @RankingCharts  Před 2 lety +3

      Uranus by Holst

    • @donderstorm1845
      @donderstorm1845 Před 2 lety

      @@RankingCharts thank you

    • @justinwhy6550
      @justinwhy6550 Před 2 lety

      @@donderstorm1845 Would it have been better for india to be balkanised? Beacause i saw that kraut india vs china you suggested and realised the main problem is that india does not have a strong central state like china since we were less politically united through history unlike china. This is why everything in india is inefficient. This could be prevented by forming smaller countries but i think regardless of that india is still constantly developing. Although would it have been better for it to not be a single country?

    • @donderstorm1845
      @donderstorm1845 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@justinwhy6550 no idea, can't know alternate history. but if you look at india today, some states are doing better than others. so the same would probably happen if they were countries. some south asian countries more developed/richer than others.
      you are right that india is still developing. but i would say don't compare yourselves to china too much. globally china is unique with its development.
      out of the top 25 largest economies today, india was the 3rd fastest growing from 1990-2020. growing its economy by 703%. that's an accomplishment by itself. indonesia was 4th with 665%, poland 2nd with 857%, and china 1st with 3593%. every major economy below indonesia grew under 500%.
      so you see if you compare india to the whole world, objectively speaking india developed very fast.
      at the same time we shouldn't be overly optimistic either because it's easier to grow when you're at the bottom (india and china were very very poor in 1990). india is growing fast but this growth is not guaranteed to last forever. if india reaches middle income status, will it keep growing or will it be like brazil, which used to grow fast too but has had a stagnant economy for over a decade now? india is also very vulnerable to climate change. india's near term future is looking bright, but long term it's uncertain.

  • @hootowl6354
    @hootowl6354 Před 2 lety +2

    Add up all those years and that's one whopping amount of CO2.
    Can you spin CO2 into gold?

    • @user-zn4pw5nk2v
      @user-zn4pw5nk2v Před 2 lety +1

      Yes(maybe, definitely something near gold or you need other stuff( hydrogen, deuterium, tritium ) to math it out), but it produces >2(000) times more CO2 than gold, or you need a fusion powerplant or f-bomb(also works), ~3 CO2 + a billion atmospheres of pressure -> gold , in the TWh energy range per atom, error bars factor of 1000 on all the big numbers. Just need to force the atoms close enough to kiss(fuse). So you can do it, when electricity becomes 0 cents/KWh

  • @WeeDsansita
    @WeeDsansita Před rokem +1

    This Graph is wrong. You should have emision per person.

  • @oommcc
    @oommcc Před rokem +2

    This chart could also be titles: Top 10 countries who love their children less. Or Top 10 countries with worse parents.

  • @garysmith4562
    @garysmith4562 Před rokem

    Co2 isn’t a pollutant. Period. this chart should be about the most productive nations.

  • @bozenab1111
    @bozenab1111 Před 2 lety +2

    A Niemcy mają wieczne pretensje do Polski...

  • @CharlesDarwintheThird
    @CharlesDarwintheThird Před 2 měsíci

    It should be the top 10 countries have to roll-out all this clean energy business.

  • @marekszydro5456
    @marekszydro5456 Před 3 měsíci

    How is Poland on the map here if there was no Poland back then in 1895 - 1918? The country was split between Germany, Russia and Austria and officially didn't exist.

  • @hannahgarstang5715
    @hannahgarstang5715 Před 2 lety +3

    I feel like looking at the total CO2 emissions per country is almost inane (unless you're maybe correlating it to population growth in conjunction with development). The CO2 emissions of a country per capita is more useful if you're looking at this from an environmental studies and policy perspective.

  • @solisdaniel6517
    @solisdaniel6517 Před 2 lety

    We are number one now

  • @cringechannel01
    @cringechannel01 Před 2 lety

    czechoslovakia and hungary were a part of austria

  • @paco2835
    @paco2835 Před rokem

    Why no one said per capita

  • @llarmstrong783
    @llarmstrong783 Před 2 lety +1

    When William Henry Harrison died in 1841, that's when this whole climate change mess started

  • @cubesclark7564
    @cubesclark7564 Před 2 lety +23

    It is true that China and India have topped the list in recent years, but together they have well over a quarter of the world's population, and they are also large countries. Is that still high on a per capita basis? Isn't there a lot of pressure on these two countries to feed so many people? Second, Since 2012, China has been promoting the "battle against pollution". The whole country has also been promoting the protection of the earth's ecology and the maintenance of biodiversity, and has made remarkable achievements. It is extremely misleading to look at total co2 emissions alone.

  • @YYUTESARK_CLAN
    @YYUTESARK_CLAN Před rokem

    trades at any cost!

  • @PushyPawn
    @PushyPawn Před rokem +1

    Watching at x2 is not fast enough.

  • @JFJ12
    @JFJ12 Před rokem +1

    Belgium was there because of the steel industry I guess. Learned from another graph it has been of the top players in steel production. But it had other heavy industries as well. I remember in the sixties when driving from Antwerp to Brussels, when crossing the Rupel river we quickly turned up the side windows of the car because of the horrible smell of the factories. I also remember going to London in the nineties for a couple of days and their was an all pervasive coal smell in the air, that once I got home stayed in my cloths for weeks.

  • @user-vc5bu4ol9u
    @user-vc5bu4ol9u Před 2 lety

    🌍

  • @cheesechicken39
    @cheesechicken39 Před rokem +1

    That chinese poluted dust visits korea

  • @shri_rand_official
    @shri_rand_official Před 2 lety +2

    India needs to be in the 2nd bcuz india is also freaking polluted

    • @politecat4412
      @politecat4412 Před 2 lety

      Lol USA is more polluted than India

    • @hmmmmmmm8412
      @hmmmmmmm8412 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Polluted doesn't mean most pollution causing

  • @MsPaintMr
    @MsPaintMr Před 10 měsíci

    Poland's emissions rose during the 40s. When you realise 💀

    • @Tutel9528
      @Tutel9528 Před 5 měsíci

      Both the Caust and German exploit of Polish soil

  • @channelofstuff6662
    @channelofstuff6662 Před 2 lety +8

    no way India is lower than the USA. almost as many people as china and all running old crappy leaded gas vehicles

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +1

      We're dependent on official government sources for data. Maybe it's just the way it is but it never made sense to me to let the foxes guard the henhouse.

    • @GagandeepSingh-zp5ss
      @GagandeepSingh-zp5ss Před 2 lety +2

      I think data is rigged.
      Delhi + Ludhiyana + Mumbai probably has more C02 than US whole.

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari Před 2 lety +3

      @@GagandeepSingh-zp5ss nope, the data is pretty accurate, what people fail to account is wind flows

    • @shubhamsingh6774
      @shubhamsingh6774 Před rokem

      Due to location India and China are more polluted but US is the one who polluted the world from decades.

    • @hmmmmmmm8412
      @hmmmmmmm8412 Před 11 měsíci

      Us has far more manufacturing industries than India so ofcourse it's going to be on top

  • @poojashaw3953
    @poojashaw3953 Před 2 lety

    Imagine how much China manufacturers

  • @eaglestar2962
    @eaglestar2962 Před 6 měsíci

    Carbon emitters and polluters have to be measured per capita. Every individual should be treated fairly for carbon emitters. Otherwise, it does not make sense and totally unfair.

  • @suzukik9833
    @suzukik9833 Před rokem

    대략 제조산업 강국 순위라고 보면 되겠군

  • @mikebronicki8264
    @mikebronicki8264 Před 2 lety +1

    Russia, number 11 economy and number 4 in pollution.

  • @garysmith4562
    @garysmith4562 Před rokem

    We, the United States should shoot for a much larger carbon footprint!

  • @Pavel_Isaev
    @Pavel_Isaev Před 6 měsíci

    Рейтинг явно составлял кто-то, кто мечтает, чтобы все люди умерли, и перестали загрязнять атмосферу.

  • @pauloterenzi
    @pauloterenzi Před 2 lety +1

    I feel stupid to report that
    volcanoes don't respect
    environmental laws but my
    car still has to pass the smog test.
    And you there thinking
    you'll save the world
    if you fart less,
    while you make
    Elon Musk richer.

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 Před 2 lety

      True. I just wish the Green Peace nut job so stop being so afraid with nuclear technology I mean I can reduce greenhouse emissions by 40%

    • @pareshbagada13
      @pareshbagada13 Před 11 dny

      You're right

  • @chris666
    @chris666 Před rokem

    USA USA 🇺🇸 🇺🇸

  • @cedricdavis513
    @cedricdavis513 Před 2 lety

    yet we still don't punish China for all this

    • @hmmmmmmm8412
      @hmmmmmmm8412 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Per capita they are very low

    • @pareshbagada13
      @pareshbagada13 Před 11 dny

      In 2022, Taylor Swift was the world's most carbon polluting celebrity, followed by Floyd Mayweather and Jay-Z.
      According to a 2024 study by Yard, the average celebrity emits 3,376.64 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually, which is 482.37 times more than the average person's annual emissions of 7 tons. Private jets are the most carbon-intensive form of transportation, and passengers on private jets emit about 45 times more than commercial passengers flying the same route.

  • @johnnyboy2459
    @johnnyboy2459 Před 2 lety

    in 2008 onwards we started making EVs and obviously we offset our emissions into GREEN ONES! LOOOOL

  • @jbrown8601
    @jbrown8601 Před rokem

    USA!USA!

  • @britasha1194
    @britasha1194 Před 2 lety

    Will Zoomers abandon the internet?

  • @thinker4worldpeace
    @thinker4worldpeace Před 5 měsíci

    The Chart should be pollution per person or per capita. The more person, the more pollution the country will produce. But we can calculate average pollution per person for each country to make more sense. This is totally meaningless.

    • @pareshbagada13
      @pareshbagada13 Před 11 dny

      In 2022, Taylor Swift was the world's most carbon polluting celebrity, followed by Floyd Mayweather and Jay-Z.
      According to a 2024 study by Yard, the average celebrity emits 3,376.64 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually, which is 482.37 times more than the average person's annual emissions of 7 tons. Private jets are the most carbon-intensive form of transportation, and passengers on private jets emit about 45 times more than commercial passengers flying the same route.

  • @GeronimoPlaz
    @GeronimoPlaz Před rokem +1

    C02 isn't pollution. Wtf lol

  • @belbrighton6479
    @belbrighton6479 Před 2 lety

    Bloody hell! Here in Britain we led the climate crisis.

  • @ssnarashi
    @ssnarashi Před 27 dny

    Can we ask reparations for the climate change from these counties?

  • @d1208cool
    @d1208cool Před 2 lety +1

    this was depressing to watch.

  • @simonn5651
    @simonn5651 Před měsícem

    murica : YOU LOT NEED TO REDUCE YOUR CARBON EMISSIONS! , don't worry though we'll make up for what you don't produce!

  • @anyaellia7460
    @anyaellia7460 Před 2 lety +1

    Poland became independent from Russia in November 2018. Before that, the two should be combined as Russian Empire for fair comparison.

    • @CrazyInWeston
      @CrazyInWeston Před 2 lety +2

      I would think that Poland existed before 2018, dont you mean 1918?

    • @robertkowalski7932
      @robertkowalski7932 Před rokem +5

      Poland's CO2 emissions before 1918 should be divided between Russia, Germany and Austria. And in the years 1939-1945 it belongs to Germany

  • @Do-not-be-sheep
    @Do-not-be-sheep Před 2 měsíci

    Climate change will end and be reversed long before the western democracies build out the infrastructure to support electrical vehicles.
    1. Carbon emissions are directly proportional to population. The population collapse has already started in Europe, Japan, Russia, and China. By 2035 the world's industrial population will be cut in half and carbon emissions with it.
    2. All of the western democracies, have not only flatlined their carbon emissions for 10 years but most have made significant reductions.
    But despite the above China is now the largest producer of atmospheric carbon and they are building coal fired electrical plants to produce the electricity for their electrical vehicles.
    China now produces 13,000 million metric tonnes of Carbon each year and increasing exponentially - compare that to the no. 2 producer USA which produces 5,000 metric tonnes and is flatlined
    Why are we bankrupting Canada to make room for China to produce more Carbon. There is nothing we do as Canada that can impact Climate change when you have countries like China. If we really want to impact climate change then Europe, Canada and the USA need to introduce massive trade sanctions against China until China demonstrates that it is part of the worldwide community.

  • @user-lz9po8xi4n
    @user-lz9po8xi4n Před 2 měsíci

    До 1917 года Польши не было.

  • @BBBB-nd8pl
    @BBBB-nd8pl Před 2 lety

    We expel carbon when we breathe. This is stupid to think we have to get 0. Lol

  • @caldreamin4250
    @caldreamin4250 Před rokem

    Darnit coal :(
    thanks china :/

  • @8ofwands300
    @8ofwands300 Před 2 lety

    Ugh! 😵 This is one comparison I wish the USA was not ahead in...but no surprise. USA was industrial powerhouse for 100 years. Now China is taking this dubious prize. India will likely overtake USA soon too.

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 Před 2 lety

      I mean we can reduce our greenhouse emissions by 40% if we invest in nuclear power plants.

  • @Oschahest
    @Oschahest Před 2 lety +1

    And people still insist the problem is in Brazil w the Amazonia 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @jimtim6206
    @jimtim6206 Před 2 lety

    You can always reduce the problem by one if climate change is such an issue

  • @justineheather2924
    @justineheather2924 Před 2 lety

    Hm... Aroganccy of countries from places 1-3 is anormous... All world has to pay taxes bc they make them 100x more then the rest world... And you name it ecollogy xD green house effect... Omg...

  • @FlugSim
    @FlugSim Před 2 lety

    Und Deutschland will die Welt retten

  • @OLBarbok
    @OLBarbok Před 2 lety +23

    Meanwhile in Germany the zoomers still think we can change it on our own while China is still chilling.

    • @jarskil8862
      @jarskil8862 Před 2 lety +4

      German *Fkers* are building more coal power while driving down nuclear power so they still need to fix their things.
      Finland soon produces 80% of energy with Uranium. While Germany is decreasing that number

    • @mira-rara
      @mira-rara Před 2 lety +24

      If you count it by per capita, Germany is producing more CO2 per capita when compared to China. Also, India actually is extremely low in terms of CO2 per capita (10% of Germany and America), they just have too many peoples.

    • @donderstorm1845
      @donderstorm1845 Před 2 lety +13

      germany's co2 per capita is higher than china's. also i wouldn't say china is doing nothing, since they're the largest investor in renewable energy by far.
      it's true that the biggest countries will have the biggest impact, but that's not an excuse for smaller countries to do nothing. if smaller countries did nothing, people in bigger countries would just see that as a reason to do nothing as well, even though climate change affects us all.

    • @jarskil8862
      @jarskil8862 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mira-rara Per Capita does not matter. The amount of carbon country pushes in atmosphere matters.
      They always use If thinking...
      "If high populated countries polluted like alot of polluting low population countries, we would need 10 Earths"
      To that I always reply, "If all countries bred like alot polluting Finland, there would only be billion people on Earth who could pollute 3x more"

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +1

      I often wonder that if...
      1.) Pollution control devices for industry and transportation have been used widely in the West for some time, especially in the United States (in particular California standards which many American states adopt).
      2.) Many components for vehicle emissions are made in China and developing economies. Alibaba itself lists 3,093 catalytic converters and related parts.
      If these are true, how widely and rapidly would emissions fall on a planetary scale if nations adopted a Western pollution standard and efficiency standards. I mean alot of the technology and hardware is manufactured outside of the West. Why not adopt some standards of the West?

  • @user-jp1gh3ot6r
    @user-jp1gh3ot6r Před 2 lety +2

    first🇷🇺

  • @Nassii212
    @Nassii212 Před 2 lety

    Pour une fois que la France n'est pas dans le classement XE

  • @randomyoutubechannel4794
    @randomyoutubechannel4794 Před 2 lety +3

    It's kinda misleading, because it says "CO2 Emissions" but sometimes they are going down. There is no technology yet that can "turn back CO2-Emissions" in that way that's shown.
    It looks more like "Co2 Permisions per *timeperiod*".
    Also you should make a relation to the amount of people living there. Something like Polution per Citizen (per *timeperiod*).

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 Před 2 lety

      I mean we can start off with nuclear power plants that can reduce our greenhouse emissions by 40% in United States. Plus down the line we're going to have to invest in Brazilian sugar that can be added to our alternative energy until we can master the battery power operated cars

    • @robertkowalski7932
      @robertkowalski7932 Před rokem

      @@attiepollard7847 What damage to the ecosystem is caused by the extraction of elements needed to produce batteries for electric cars?

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 Před rokem

      @@robertkowalski7932 very little. If the people do not want oil then we're going to have to search for a realistic alternatives.

  • @attiepollard7847
    @attiepollard7847 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes the United States is the leading polluter when it comes to greenhouse emissions but at the same time we can fix that by investing in nuclear power plants to reduce our greenhouse emissions by 40%. But even when we do that India and China are not going to do the same unless you place major sanctions on them and the question is do you want to go to war over greenhouse admissions if they don't comply?

    • @shubhamsingh6774
      @shubhamsingh6774 Před rokem

      You become developed by polluting the world for decades and when other countries do that they are wrong. Hypocrite. Now I can see the reason why US is declining so fast.

  • @Manorainjan
    @Manorainjan Před 2 lety +3

    If You ever think, CO2 is a problem for anything, which it is not,
    than plot the CO2 emissions of a country or region against their "Gross domestic product"!
    Then You see who knows how to produce the goods which we need to survive in an efficient style.
    If You shift any production from an European country to India, the CO2-emissions for the same amount of production will triple, the quality of the good will go down, the workers will be less healthy and less protected.

    • @erickrobertson7089
      @erickrobertson7089 Před 2 lety +1

      I've thought the same thing myself.

    • @Manorainjan
      @Manorainjan Před 2 lety

      @@erickrobertson7089 You might enjoy this one: Fritz Vahrenholt - Energiewende zwischen Wunsch und Wirklichkeit (Energy transition between wishful thinking and reality)
      czcams.com/video/GTSbAPv51XI/video.html
      automatic translation by YT available.