Climate TRACE

[2] It launched in 2021 before COP26,[3] and improves monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) of both carbon dioxide and methane.[13] Developing countries in the Paris Agreement will submit every two years.[14][15] Some large emitters, such as Iran which has not ratified the agreement, have not submitted a greenhouse gas inventory in the 2020s.[16] New data was released around the time of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference.[17] Power plant emissions are tracked by training software with supervised learning to combine satellite imagery with other open data, such as government datasets, OpenStreetMap,[18] and company reports.
Nonprofitgreenhouse gas emissionsmonitoring, reporting and verification (MRV)carbon dioxidemethanecoal minespower station smokestackswith satellite dataartificial intelligencegreenhouse gas emission sourcesKelly Sims Gallagherpolitics of climate changeclimate pledgesDeveloped countriesUNFCCCDeveloping countriesParis Agreementgreenhouse gas inventory2022 United Nations Climate Change Conferencesupervised learningsatellite imageryopen datagovernment datasetsOpenStreetMapcompany reportsGlobal Energy MonitorRocky Mountain InstituteU.S. Vice President Al GoreGlossary of climate changeThe New York TimesYale Climate ConnectionsThe Washington PostThe Wall Street JournalFast CompanyUnited Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change