Cayman Islands: Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP)
In , Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) was 0.06.
That's down 5.2% from 2022, the highest value since .
The global average for this indicator in 2023 was 0.41 .
Source: World Bank Open Data (EN.GHG.CO2.RT.GDP.KD) • Data as of 2023
Trend (2006–2023)
Highlights
- Peak
- 0.07
- Trough
- 0.04
- 1-year change
- -5.2%
- 5-year change
- +0.3%
- +0.1% / yr
- 10-year change
- +22.0%
- +2.0% / yr
Historical Data — Last 10 Years
| Year | Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) |
|---|---|
| 0.0593 | |
| 0.0625 | |
| 0.0580 | |
| 0.0643 | |
| 0.0724 | |
| 0.0591 | |
| 0.0560 | |
| 0.0541 | |
| 0.0533 | |
| 0.0507 |
About Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP)
Annual emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), one of the six Kyoto greenhouse gases (GHG), from the agriculture, energy, waste, and industrial sectors, excluding LULUCF divided by the GDP in constant 2021 US$.
Indicator code: EN.GHG.CO2.RT.GDP.KD • Category: Environment
Frequently asked questions
- What was Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) in 2023?
- In 2023, Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) was 0.06, according to World Bank Open Data.
- Is Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) rising or falling?
- Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) fell 5.2% from 2022 to 2023.
- How does Cayman Islands's Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) compare to the world average?
- The global average for Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) in 2023 was 0.41, so Cayman Islands is below the world average.
- What is Carbon intensity of GDP (kg CO2e per constant 2015 US$ of GDP) and how is it measured?
- Annual emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), one of the six Kyoto greenhouse gases (GHG), from the agriculture, energy, waste, and industrial sectors, excluding LULUCF divided by the GDP in constant 2021 US$.
Source: World Bank Open Data (EN.GHG.CO2.RT.GDP.KD), CC BY 4.0.