Agricultural nitrous oxide emissions (% of total) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Agricultural nitrous oxide emissions are emissions produced through fertilizer use (synthetic and animal manure), animal waste management, agricultural waste burning (nonenergy, on-site), and savannah burning.

Source: World Bank staff estimates from original source: European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC)/Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL). Emission Database for Global Atmospheric Research (EDGAR): http://edgar.jrc.ec.europa.eu/.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Comoros 100.00 2008
2 Angola 97.96 2008
3 Chad 97.82 2008
4 Zambia 96.64 2008
5 Mali 96.41 2008
6 Sudan 96.27 2008
7 Djibouti 96.15 2008
8 Namibia 95.67 2008
9 Mauritania 95.65 2008
10 Somalia 95.58 2008
11 Congo 95.43 2008
12 Madagascar 94.31 2008
13 Burkina Faso 93.56 2008
14 Côte d'Ivoire 93.35 2008
15 Botswana 92.74 2008
16 Guinea 92.58 2008
17 Guinea-Bissau 92.31 2008
18 Niger 91.87 2008
19 Kenya 91.53 2008
20 The Gambia 89.74 2008
21 Mozambique 89.59 2008
22 Dem. Rep. Congo 89.25 2008
23 Cabo Verde 88.89 2008
24 Sierra Leone 88.43 2008
25 Eswatini 88.37 2008
26 Ethiopia 87.14 2008
27 Rwanda 87.04 2008
28 Benin 86.19 2008
29 Morocco 83.54 2008
30 Zimbabwe 83.22 2008
31 Ghana 82.01 2008
32 Gabon 81.82 2008
33 Malawi 81.43 2008
34 Uganda 81.36 2008
35 Lesotho 79.45 2008
36 Nigeria 78.92 2008
37 Tanzania 78.71 2008
38 South Africa 78.21 2008
39 Togo 77.93 2008
40 Tunisia 69.85 2008
41 Libya 67.72 2008
42 Burundi 66.24 2008
43 Egypt 66.03 2008
44 Senegal 65.06 2008
45 Algeria 50.26 2008
46 São Tomé and Principe 50.00 2008
47 Eritrea 44.44 2008
48 Mauritius 44.00 2008
49 Central African Republic 38.02 2008
50 Equatorial Guinea 33.33 2008
51 Liberia 28.99 2008
52 Cameroon 8.90 2008
53 Seychelles 0.00 2008

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Development Relevance: The addition of man-made greenhouse gases to the Atmosphere disturbs the earth's radiative balance. This is leading to an increase in the earth's surface temperature and to related effects on climate, sea level rise and world agriculture. Emissions of CO2 are from burning oil, coal and gas for energy use, burning wood and waste materials, and from industrial processes such as cement production. Emission intensity is the average emission rate of a given pollutant from a given source relative to the intensity of a specific activity. Emission intensities are also used to compare the environmental impact of different fuels or activities. The related terms - emission factor and carbon intensity - are often used interchangeably. The carbon dioxide emissions of a country are only an indicator of one greenhouse gas. For a more complete idea of how a country influences climate change, gases such as methane and nitrous oxide should be taken into account. This is particularly important in agricultural economies. The environmental effects of carbon dioxide are of significant interest. Carbon dioxide (CO2) makes up the largest share of the greenhouse gases contributing to global warming and climate change. Converting all other greenhouse gases (methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)) to carbon dioxide (or CO2) equivalents makes it possible to compare them and to determine their individual and total contributions to global warming. The Kyoto Protocol, an environmental agreement adopted in 1997 by many of the parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is working towards curbing CO2 emissions globally.

Limitations and Exceptions: National reporting to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change that follows the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change guidelines is based on national emission inventories and covers all sources of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions as well as carbon sinks (such as forests). To estimate emissions, the countries that are Parties to the Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC) use complex, state-of-the-art methodologies recommended by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Agricultural nitrous oxide emissions are emissions produced through fertilizer use (synthetic and animal manure), animal waste management, agricultural waste burning (nonenergy, on-site), and savannah burning. IPCC category 4 = Agriculture. Expressed in CO2 equivalent using the GWP100 metric of the Second Assessment Report of IPCC and include N2O (GWP100=310).

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual