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Assessment CO2 Emission Intensity of Crude Oil Production in Iraq
Author(s) -
Jamal S. Abd al rukabie,
Ahmed S. Hassan,
Jasim H. Kadhum
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/928/7/072048
Subject(s) - tonne , christian ministry , kuznets curve , carbon dioxide , emission intensity , crude oil , environmental science , production (economics) , intensity (physics) , environmental engineering , barrel (horology) , agricultural economics , mathematics , natural resource economics , economics , waste management , engineering , chemistry , econometrics , petroleum engineering , political science , physics , mechanical engineering , excitation , electrical engineering , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , law , macroeconomics
Carbon Dioxide Emissions Intensity (CDEI) in Iraq correlated between carbon dioxide emission (kg CO 2 ) and crude oil production (COP) (kg oil equivalent). This relationship is important for industry and energy sectors to the achievement of their economic and environmental goal, then to know a common pattern of emissions intensity. The sources of data set from Carbon Dioxide Information analysis center (CDIAC), contain: total CO2 emission, COP from Iraqi Ministry of oil and Iraqi crude oil production increased over time and about (more than 80%) from Basra city. Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) was calculated. CDEI was nonlinear behavior that high level in the 1970s then decreased to reach 1.707 kg co2 / kg oil equivalent in 1997, and CDEI was more sensitive to COP than total CO2 emissions. EKC maximum values present in early 1970s and in 2004 present highest value was (0.082 metric ton / current US$ person). COP was unstable level, fluctuation between (1-3) mb/d, till reach 4.29 mb/d as average in 2019.

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