According to Eurostat estimates, in 2022, the EU carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuel combustion (oil and oil products, natural gas, coal and peat) for energy use in the EU territory reached almost 2.4 Gigatons (Gt), indicating a decrease of 2.8%, compared with the previous year. CO2 emissions from energy use are a major contributor to global warming and account for around 75% of all man-made greenhouse gas emissions in the EU. The fuel mix, housing standards, economic growth, size of the population, and transport and industrial activities are some factors that influence CO2 emissions from energy use.

CO2 emissions are emitted when fossil fuels are combusted. For example, using imported natural gas for electricity generation leads to an increase in emissions in the country that imported the gas. In contrast, electricity imports do not affect the country’s emissions, as these are reported in the country where the electricity was produced. A more in-depth analysis needs to take into account all imports and exports of different primary and derived energy products, commodities with embedded emissions (such as iron and steel), as well as, in the case of transport, fuel tourism (i.e., fuelling a vehicle in one country but consuming that fuel in another country).

Biggest decreases in CO2 emissions from territorial energy use in Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium and Hungary
 

bar chart: CO2 emissions from energy use in the EU, 2022 (% change 2021 vs 2022)


Source dataset:   special data extraction


In 2022, CO2 emissions from territorial energy use decreased in 17 EU countries. The largest decrease was registered in the Netherlands (-12.8%), followed by Luxembourg (-12%), Belgium (-9.7%) and Hungary (-8.6%). 

On the other end, Bulgaria registered the biggest increase in CO2 emissions (+12%), followed by Portugal (+9.9%) and Malta (+4.1%).

Data show that Germany alone accounts for one-quarter of the EU’s total CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion for energy use. Italy and Poland (each 12.4%), and France (10.7%) came next on the EU’s list of the biggest CO2 emitters in 2022.

In 2022, aggregated data shows that CO2 emissions from solid fossil fuels (coal and oil shale, excluding peat) slightly increased at the EU level (+3 percentage points; pp.), whereas emissions from oil and petroleum products remained at approximately the same level as in 2021 (+1 pp). On the other hand, CO2 emissions from natural gas decreased significantly (-13 pp), reflecting, among other things, the efforts invested by EU countries to achieve the voluntary gas demand reduction target introduced in August 2022. 
 

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Methodological notes

 

  • EU total excludes Sweden due to expected revisions of monthly oil data for 2021 and 2022.
  • Early estimates of CO2 emissions from energy use for 2022 published in this news article are computed by Eurostat based on aggregated monthly energy statistics for fossil fuels (oil and oil products, natural gas, coal and peat) for the years 2021 and 2022. These monthly data are official data provided by Member States to Eurostat. The comparison of the two years gives a year-on-year change by fuel (increase/decrease by x%). This year-on-year change is then applied to official (GHG) inventory data Member States provided to UNFCCC for the reference year 2021 and results in the amount of CO2 emitted (in kt) in 2022 by fossil fuel and by country territory. Fuel used for international marine and aviation transport is not included as it would be if the calculation concerned the national or EU economy.
  • CO2 emission data published here may differ from those published nationally. More information is available in the methodological note.
  • Data on CO2 emissions from energy use presented in this article do not include CO2 emissions resulting from the combustion of non-renewable waste.
  • Country notes: Estonia: monthly data for shale oil is not taken into account because the apparent consumption of shale oil is zero in UNFCCC data. Cyprus: data on jet kerosene consumption in international aviation were gap filled by Eurostat. 

 

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