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Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Box 10-B
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Data
Both the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Energy Information Administration (EIA)
estimate annual U.S. GHG emissions. EPA is responsible for producing the official inventory of U.S.
emissions, as required under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Both agencies use
EIA fuel consumption data as a basis for estimating most GHG emissions, but differences in their
methodologies can result in different datasets.1 EIA usually releases its data about six
months before EPA. EPA provides more detail of interest to transportation, such as emissions by mode.
EIA presents emissions in million metric tons of carbon equivalent (mmtce), while EPA uses teragrams of
carbon dioxide equivalent (TgCO2Eq) as required under the Convention.2
1 For more information, see U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, Transportation Statistics Annual Report 2001 (Washington, DC: 2002), p. 239, also
available at http://www.bts.gov.
2 TgCO2Eq = 1 mmtce x (44/12).
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