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tCO₂e (Tonnes of CO₂ Equivalent)

tCO₂e — tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent — is the standard unit for expressing greenhouse gas emissions. It normalizes different greenhouse gases (methane, nitrous oxide, HFCs, etc.) to their equivalent warming impact relative to CO₂ using global warming potentials (GWPs), allowing them to be summed into a single comparable metric.

The atmosphere contains multiple greenhouse gases, each with different warming potencies and atmospheric lifetimes. Methane (CH₄) is roughly 28 times more potent than CO₂ over 100 years; nitrous oxide (N₂O) is about 265 times more potent. Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) used as refrigerants can be thousands of times more potent.

To create a single, comparable metric, the IPCC publishes global warming potentials (GWPs) that express each gas's warming effect relative to CO₂ over a chosen time horizon (typically 100 years, GWP-100). Multiplying the mass of each gas by its GWP yields CO₂ equivalent (CO₂e), which can then be summed across all gases.

For example, 1 tonne of methane emitted equals 28 tCO₂e, and 1 kg of the refrigerant R-410A equals approximately 2.088 tCO₂e. This normalization is essential for comparing emissions across sectors, setting reduction targets, and tracking progress.

Every carbon accounting platform calculates in tCO₂e. The term appears in GHG inventories, CDP responses, CSRD disclosures, SBTi targets, and carbon offset registries. Understanding tCO₂e is the baseline literacy for anyone working in sustainability.

Frequently asked questions

What does tCO₂e mean? +

tCO₂e stands for tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent. It is the standard unit for expressing greenhouse gas emissions, normalizing all GHGs (methane, nitrous oxide, HFCs, etc.) to their equivalent CO₂ warming impact using global warming potentials published by the IPCC.

Why is CO₂ equivalent used instead of individual gases? +

CO₂ equivalent allows different greenhouse gases with varying warming potencies to be expressed as a single, comparable unit. This makes it possible to sum total emissions, set unified reduction targets, compare across sectors, and track progress over time.

Related terms

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