🇶🇦 Qatar's Historic Contribution to Global Warming Since 1850

Qatar's Historic Contribution to Global Warming Since 1850

Key Insights

Historic Warming Impact At A Glance

Qatar's impact from historic emissions totals roughly 4,800 megatonnes of CO2‑equivalents, representing about 0.1% of the global total. On a population‑weighted historic basis, however, the country's per capita impact is around 80 tonnes per capita per year-an extremely high rating. This combination of a modest global share and an exceptionally high per‑person contribution reflects a small population with very intensive emissions over recent decades.

Fossil CO2 Dominates The Story

Fossil CO2 makes up a little over half of Qatar's historic warming impact. Gas‑related CO2 alone contributes about two‑fifths of the national total, rising steadily from the late 1980s and accelerating since the early 2000s. A sharp surge around the early 2010s was followed by a period of near‑stability through the late 2010s, with a renewed uptick in the early 2020s. Oil‑related CO2 grew through the 1990s, dipped around the mid‑2010s, and then climbed again more recently. Other fossil CO2 is smaller and more variable. Land‑use CO2 remains negligible throughout the record.

Methane Trends And Temperature Effects

Methane accounts for almost half of Qatar's historic impact. Emissions increased from the post‑war era to the late 2000s-driven overwhelmingly by fugitive sources-then edged down and stabilized at high levels thereafter. As growth slowed, methane's temperature contribution no longer accelerated as it did during earlier expansion. By contrast, nitrous oxide and fluorinated gases are minor, rising from very low baselines since the 2000s, with fluorinated gases increasing gradually into the 2020s.

Actionable Priorities And Leadership

Given its extremely high historic per person contribution, Qatar can lead by rapidly cutting gas‑related CO2, sharply reducing fugitive methane, and curbing oil‑related CO2-its three largest sources. Priorities include cleaner energy use, persistent methane leak prevention, and sustained efficiency improvements. Demonstrating swift progress at home and sharing know‑how and support abroad would align high historic responsibility with climate leadership.

Background

Historic Per Capita Emissions

Historic per capita emissions are a crucial long-period (since 1850), population-weighted (accounting for changing population size) indicator. It shows the contribution of greenhouse gas emissions of a nation per capita per year to the current warming.


The rating scale is:

  • Extremely High: above 10 tonnes per capita per year
  • Very High: above 7.5 tonnes
  • High: above 5 tonnes
  • Moderate: above 2.5 tonnes
  • Low: above 0 tonnes
  • Negative Emissions: under 0

Historically, we don't expect any nation to reach negative emissions. Current warming, or warming targets, like 1.5 °C and 1.7 °C are all based on the fact that there have been human-induced greenhouse gas emissions and there will be some more. It is clear, however, that some nations have had incredibly high historic contributions per capita.

Total Historic Impact

This is the total amount of CO2, CH4, N2O, and F-Gases emissions of a nation from 1850 till 2023 (last available year in the data) expressed in megatonnes of CO2-equivalents. The gases have different atmospheric lifetimes (decay) and warming effects, for this reason we use the GWP100 (100 year time horizon method) to calculate the global warming potential of N2O and F-Gases to express in CO2-equivalents. For CH4, which is a short-term gas, we use the GWP* method to express the historic impact in CO2-equivalents.

Wikipedia: Global Warming Potential

Total Historic Share

This is a nation's total historic share of global emissions and its contribution to global warming. It is an indicator of historic responsibility. All nations share the responsibility to ensure that developing nations do not copy and repeat the behavior of nations with high historic greenhouse gas emissions, they should not buy into old unsustainable fossil-fuels-based technology, land-use, and infrastructure, rather foster a sustainable and cleaner development.

About the Data

The last available year in all the emission datasets is 2023. CO2 emissions data is from the Global Carbon Project. It contains national CO2 emissions from fossil sources and land-use change. Emissions from CH4, N2O and F-gases come from the PRIMAP-Hist dataset. It is a rich dataset that combines several published sources to create a historical emissions time series for various greenhouse gases. Population data are also from Global Carbon Project where available, however, for many nations it doesn't have historic population going back to 1850. Those historic gaps are filled with population data from Our World in Data.

The Key Insights paragraph was created using a large language model (LLM) in combination with our data, historic events, and a structured approach for best accuracy by separating the context generation from the interpretation and narrative.

Data Sources

Global Carbon Budget 2024 Global Carbon Budget
Update cycle: yearlyDelay: ~ 10 months after the end of the year. Current year values are estimated and published in November.Credits: Friedlingstein et al., 2024, ESSD. Friedlingstein, P., O'Sullivan, M., Jones, M. W., Andrew, R. M., Hauck, J., Landschützer, P., Le Quéré, C., Li, H., Luijkx, I. T., Olsen, A., Peters, G. P., Peters, W., Pongratz, J., Schwingshackl, C., Sitch, S., Canadell, J. G., Ciais, P., Jackson, R. B., Alin, S. R., Arneth, A., Arora, V., Bates, N. R., Becker, M., Bellouin, N., Berghoff, C. F., Bittig, H. C., Bopp, L., Cadule, P., Campbell, K., Chamberlain, M. A., Chandra, N., Chevallier, F., Chini, L. P., Colligan, T., Decayeux, J., Djeutchouang, L., Dou, X., Duran Rojas, C., Enyo, K., Evans, W., Fay, A., Feely, R. A., Ford, D. J., Foster, A., Gasser, T., Gehlen, M., Gkritzalis, T., Grassi, G., Gregor, L., Gruber, N., Gürses, Ö., Harris, I., Hefner, M., Heinke, J., Hurtt, G. C., Iida, Y., Ilyina, T., Jacobson, A. R., Jain, A., Jarníková, T., Jersild, A., Jiang, F., Jin, Z., Kato, E., Keeling, R. F., Klein Goldewijk, K., Knauer, J., Korsbakken, J. I., Lauvset, S. K., Lefèvre, N., Liu, Z., Liu, J., Ma, L., Maksyutov, S., Marland, G., Mayot, N., McGuire, P., Metzl, N., Monacci, N. M., Morgan, E. J., Nakaoka, S.-I., Neill, C., Niwa, Y., Nützel, T., Olivier, L., Ono, T., Palmer, P. I., Pierrot, D., Qin, Z., Resplandy, L., Roobaert, A., Rosan, T. M., Rödenbeck, C., Schwinger, J., Smallman, T. L., Smith, S., Sospedra-Alfonso, R., Steinhoff, T., Sun, Q., Sutton, A. J., Séférian, R., Takao, S., Tatebe, H., Tian, H., Tilbrook, B., Torres, O., Tourigny, E., Tsujino, H., Tubiello, F., van der Werf, G., Wanninkhof, R., Wang, X., Yang, D., Yang, X., Yu, Z., Yuan, W., Yue, X., Zaehle, S., Zeng, N., and Zeng, J.: Global Carbon Budget 2024, Earth Syst. Sci. Data Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2024-519, in review, 2024.

PRIMAP-hist The PRIMAP-hist national historical emissions time series (1750-2023)
Update cycle: Every few monthsDelay: Less than 1 yearCredits: Gütschow, Johannes; Busch, Daniel; Pflüger, Mika (2024): The PRIMAP-hist national historical emissions time series (1750-2023) v2.6. Zenodo.

Our World in Data Population - Our World in Data
Update cycle: YearlyDelay: 7 monthsCredits: HYDE (2023); Gapminder (2022); UN WPP (2024) – with major processing by Our World in Data

Qatar's Historic Contribution to Global Warming Since 1850