Sri Lanka | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (% of GNI)
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
Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Records
63
Source
Sri Lanka | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (% of GNI)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
0.58357495 1990
0.57259509 1991
0.72646997 1992
0.69026181 1993
0.7255419 1994
0.69187043 1995
0.97117702 1996
0.92560933 1997
0.94816494 1998
1.09695263 1999
1.26671306 2000
1.36128932 2001
1.40950065 2002
1.39371218 2003
1.3879582 2004
1.34925484 2005
1.09030557 2006
1.09380356 2007
0.86500842 2008
0.81628709 2009
0.64378482 2010
0.68545745 2011
0.75618218 2012
0.62203088 2013
0.73414538 2014
0.85176348 2015
0.91770196 2016
0.94943287 2017
0.92272082 2018
1.12047629 2019
1.18528662 2020
1.27047531 2021
2022
Sri Lanka | Adjusted savings: carbon dioxide damage (% of GNI)
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
Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Records
63
Source