International coverage of CARMA 2.0 update
News of the CARMA 2.0 update appeared in US media and abroad, including in Taiwan and India. CGD Web and Media Assistant Ben Edwards collects a few excerpts in “CGD Coverage from the CARMA 2.0 Media Launch.”
CARMA 2.0 has arrived! Power sector still stuck on fossil fuel
CARMA 2.0 has arrived! And our analysis of the latest data shows that the world still has a long way to go on curbing emissions growth.
Last week’s Washington Post feature on CARMA focuses on massive growth in Chinese emissions. Although pollution wasn’t big news once the Olympics started, this year China’s power sector will emit more CO2 than the US power sector for the first time. Furthermore, rapid construction of coal-fired plants is wiping out any improvements in emissions intensity. But China will (sort of) head in the right direction, on carbon intensity, as it doubles electricity production over the next decade: the share of fossil-fuel generation will decrease from 83% to 73%.
What about the rest of the world?
Just the Facts: On The State of NTPC’s CARMA
Recent weeks have seen the carbon footprint of the National Thermal Power Corporation - India’s largest power company - come under some scrutiny. A Times of India article in late July first noted NTPC’s global prominence in terms of CO2 emissions, drawing upon a now-outdated version of CGD’s CARMA database of global power sector emissions. Last week, a rebuttal from NTPC and the Indian Ministry of Power claimed that CARMA relied upon “inaccurate generation figures” and argued that the company was one of the world’s most efficient power producers. This weekend, an article syndicated in many Indian newspapers publicized the emissions figures from the just-released CARMA 2.0 database, including the Indian power sector’s #3 global ranking and NTPC’s annual emissions of 186 million U.S. tons of CO2. In the same article, the company responded by saying, “We are among the most efficient producers of power using fossil fuels. NTPC is the second best in the world, emitting only 800 grams of CO2 per kwh of electricity generation.” Here I explain the supposed discrepancies, try to set the record straight regarding NTPC’s present carbon emissions, and take a look at the company’s claims regarding efficiency.
Getting Started: A Quick Video Tutorial
If you’re new to CARMA, we’ve created a quick, 4-minute video tutorial (below) introducing you to a couple of CARMA’s more useful features. In particular, it shows you how to easily locate emissions information for any power plant or locale in the world — like your hometown, for example. I hope you find it useful.
CARMA 2.0 Up And Running!
We’re pleased to annouce that Version 2.0 of CARMA is now up and running. The Washington Post featured an article on the new data in today’s paper, focusing on the growth of emissions in China. We have posted the full press release for CARMA 2.0 on the Center for Global Development’s website.
We have also created a Version Tracker page that lists the release dates and changes made to CARMA as we go along. We hope you explore and enjoy the new information and, as always, I encourage you to stay informed of our work by signing up for our newsletter on the right side of the page.
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Welcome to CARMA
The objective of CARMA.org is to arm individuals with the information they need to forge a cleaner, low-carbon future. By revealing the unvarnished truth regarding both clean and dirty power producers, CARMA hopes to influence the opinions and decisions of consumers, investors, shareholders, managers, workers, activists, and policymakers. In other contexts, so-called “public information disclosure” techniques have proven successful in reducing traditional pollutants.





