China’s Carbon Emission Calculations: A Methodology Shift Sparks Debate

China's new calculation method for carbon emissions cuts reported growth by half from 2020 to 2025. While decreasing apparent carbon intensity, these changes might ease the path to meeting 2030 climate targets but raise concerns about the accuracy and dedication to climate goals.


Devdiscourse News Desk | * Researchers Say New Carbon Data Suggests China Has Changed Its Emission Calculations * Crea Says Latest Carbon Intensity Data Suggests Emissions ​Grew 7% From 2020 To 2025* Previously Reported Figures Implied Growth Of ​14% * China Is The World's Largest Emitter Of Carbon Dioxide* China ‌Could ​Meet 2030 Climate Commitments With Change | Updated: 27-05-2026 12:04 IST | Created: 27-05-2026 12:04 IST
China’s Carbon Emission Calculations: A Methodology Shift Sparks Debate
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China has made a significant change in the way it calculates carbon emissions, resulting in a dramatic reduction in the reported growth of these emissions from 2020 to 2025, according to a new report by climate researchers.

The study highlights that the world's largest emitter has effectively cut the previously reported emissions growth by half, suggesting China's carbon emissions rose just 7% in that period instead of 14%, a downward revision equivalent to the annual emissions of countries like Germany or South Korea.

This change in methodology may enable China to meet its 2030 climate commitments more readily, yet it introduces concerns about transparency and the consistency of China's climate targets amid the evolving global climate landscape.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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