World

S. Korea emitted 701.3m tons of greenhouse gas in 2019: Environment Ministry

January 01, 2022
This Oct. 27, 2021, file photo shows a thermal power plant in Incheon, west of Seoul. — courtesy Yonhap
This Oct. 27, 2021, file photo shows a thermal power plant in Incheon, west of Seoul. — courtesy Yonhap

SEOUL — South Korea emitted a total of 701.3 million tons of greenhouse gas in 2019, Yonhap quoted the Environment Ministry as saying Friday.

The 2019 figure, confirmed by the Greenhouse Gas Inventory and Research Center, represents a 3.5 percent drop from the 2018 tally, according to the ministry.

The decrease came largely from a reduction in power plant emissions from 268.5 million tons to 248.7 million tons and alternative ozone layer depleting substances from 8.8 million tons to 6.3 million tons.

But road transportation and non-metal emissions increased by 2.75 million tons and 1.13 million tons, respectively.

By industry, the energy sector accounted for 87.2 percent, or 611.5 million tons, of the total emission. The energy sector's emissions were down by 3.3 percent, or 21 million tons, from 2018 due to restrictions on coal thermal power generations imposed to reduce fine dust air pollution.

Industrial plants, and farming and waste sectors took up 7.4 percent, 3 percent and 2.4 percent of the total, respectively.

Nearly 380 tons of greenhouse gas were emitted per 1 billion won ($841,000) of gross domestic product, down 5.6 percent from 401 tons tallied in 2018.

Gas emission per individual was 13.6 tons, down 3.7 percent from 14.1 tons recorded in 2018.

According to the ministry, the 2020 tally is expected to fall to a total emission of 648.6 million tons. — Yonhap


January 01, 2022
215 views
HIGHLIGHTS
World
19 minutes ago

Police clear out pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA and detain protesters

World
hour ago

Dubai flights canceled, schools and offices shut as rain pelts UAE just weeks after deadly floods

World
2 hours ago

Australian student protests show US campus divisions over Gaza war are going global