Published in The Pulse
Edmonton has the highest per capita emissions of any municipality in Canada, according to the University of Alberta.
The city emitted the equivalent of 18 tonnes of carbon dioxide per person in 2020. In comparison, Calgary emitted 14 tonnes, and Vancouver emitted six tonnes in 2019.
This chart shows where all of the greenhouse gases are coming from. The plurality comes from transportation, mainly from burning fossil fuels for vehicles, closely followed by the industrial sector, which includes everything from greenhouse gas waste from manufacturing processes, to electricity for industrial buildings. “Other” emissions include those from agriculture, landfills, and sewage.
Electricity generation as a whole accounts for more of the city’s emissions than burning fuel for cars, but this is divided between the residential, commercial, and industrial sectors. A paper published by Stantec in 2019 said that electricity accounts for 43% of the city’s emissions, mainly due to the fact that Alberta’s electricity grid is almost entirely sourced by coal and natural gas — the two most carbon-intensive emitters. The other main source of emissions in these sectors is natural gas burned for heat.
Source: Chart of the week: Where do Edmonton’s emissions come from? – Taproot Edmonton