EIA: CO2 fell in every state since 2005
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports energy-related CO2 emissions per capita declined in every U.S. state from 2005 to 2023, down 30% nationally, with absolute emissions falling 20% as population grew 14%. EIA attributes the drop mainly to a sharp reduction in coal-fired power offset by more natural gas and rising wind and solar, and it projects a roughly 1% increase in overall CO2 emissions in 2025 as data centers and heavy industry boost electricity demand.
Climate
Energy
📰 Sources (1)
Energy-related CO2 emissions are falling in every state
New information:
- Per-capita emissions fell in all 50 states; nationwide per-capita down 30% (2005–2023).
- Absolute U.S. energy-related CO2 fell 20% while population rose 14%.
- Largest per-capita declines: Maryland (-49%), Washington, D.C. (-48%), Georgia (-45%); smallest: Mississippi (-1%), Idaho (-3%), South Dakota (-4%).
- EIA cites less coal, more natural gas, and added wind/solar as key drivers; forecasts ~1% emissions uptick in 2025 due to data centers/heavy industry.