Denmark | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (current US$)
Cost of damage due to carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel use and the manufacture of cement, estimated to be US$40 per ton of CO2 (the unit damage in 2017 US dollars for CO2 emitted in 2020) times the number of tons of CO2 emitted. Statistical concept and methodology: Pollution damage from emissions of carbon dioxide is calculated as the marginal social cost per unit multiplied by the increase in the stock of carbon dioxide. The unit damage figure represents the present value of global damage to economic assets and to human welfare over the time the unit of pollution remains in the atmosphere.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Kingdom of Denmark
Records
63
Source
Denmark | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (current US$)
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631205731.42143 1990
804421120.37257 1991
763970522.07206 1992
832347314.98739 1993
925480943.19471 1994
917228473.5107 1995
1167374954.8015 1996
1053795795.0197 1997
1022184438.8946 1998
1007014655.896 1999
976340752.17043 2000
1052821119.6812 2001
1085024705.4995 2002
1244593043.3495 2003
1185414669.2757 2004
1167965578.686 2005
1425567870.9641 2006
1375480978.7966 2007
1345375918.8019 2008
1323705680.3011 2009
1375185003.1054 2010
1285603437.0159 2011
1187497293.1364 2012
1291722396.9596 2013
1206086503.9214 2014
1171844025.266 2015
1268396086.3335 2016
1239628325.1189 2017
1297991885.0045 2018
1211133978.1619 2019
1154098846.9621 2020
1213645247.8757 2021
2022
Denmark | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (current US$)
Cost of damage due to carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel use and the manufacture of cement, estimated to be US$40 per ton of CO2 (the unit damage in 2017 US dollars for CO2 emitted in 2020) times the number of tons of CO2 emitted. Statistical concept and methodology: Pollution damage from emissions of carbon dioxide is calculated as the marginal social cost per unit multiplied by the increase in the stock of carbon dioxide. The unit damage figure represents the present value of global damage to economic assets and to human welfare over the time the unit of pollution remains in the atmosphere.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Kingdom of Denmark
Records
63
Source