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Indicator Assessment

Energy efficiency and specific CO2 emissions

Indicator Assessment
Prod-ID: IND-110-en
  Also known as: TERM 027
Published 03 Nov 2008 Last modified 11 May 2021
8 min read
This is an old version, kept for reference only.

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  • Specific CO2 emissions of road transport have decreased during the past decade (1995-2006), mainly due to an improvement in the fuel efficiency of passenger car transport. The voluntary agreement with the car industry has led to some, albeit not sufficient reductions towards the 140 g CO2/km target by 2008/2009, but in the absence of additional measures, the EU objective of 120 g CO2/km will not be met at a 2012 horizon.
  • Specific CO2 emissions of air transport, although decreasing, are of the same order of magnitude as for road, while rail and maritime shipping remain the most energy efficient modes of passenger transport.
  • Specific energy efficiency of light and heavy duty trucks has improved, but road transport still consumes significantly more energy per tonne-km than rail or ship freight transport.
This indicator is discontinued. No more assessments will be produced.

TERM27 Specific CO2 emissions per passenger-km and per mode of transport in Europe

Note: TREMOVE results refer to 30 EEA member countries (EU-27 plus Norway, Switzerland, Turkey) and Croatia, while TRENDS covers only EU-15.

Data source:

TREMOVE and TRENDS

TERM27 Specific CO2 emissions per tonne-km and per mode of transport in Europe

Note: TREMOVE results refer to 30 EEA member countries (EU-27 plus Norway, Switzerland, Turkey) and Croatia, while TRENDS covers only EU-15.

Data source:

TREMOVE and TRENDS

TERM27 Development of specific CO2 emissions from road passenger and freight transport in Europe

Note: TREMOVE results refer to 30 EEA member countries (EU-27 plus Norway, Switzerland, Turkey) and Croatia, while TRENDS covers only EU-15.

Data source:

TREMOVE and TRENDS

The specific CO2 emissions of the road sector were reduced between 1995 and 2006 by 7 % for passenger transport and 10 % for freight transport. The combined effect of improvements in aircraft technology and increased load factors has resulted in a decrease in specific CO2 emissions of air passenger transport by 25 % between 1995 and 2006. But because transport volumes have grown faster than efficiency improvements the total emissions are still growing.

The energy efficiency of rail, maritime and inland shipping has only recorded slight changes of the order of +/- 1.5 % in the time period considered. Emission factors for electric rail covers emissions for electricity production (at power plants) and electricity distribution losses.

Passenger cars and vans remain the least energy efficient road passenger transport mode in terms of specific CO2 emissions and energy consumption respectively. On the other hand, buses and coaches are the most energy efficient mode of road passenger transport, emitting less than half of CO2 per passenger-kilometre than passenger cars, while two-wheelers are found in-between these values. The energy efficiency and CO2 per passenger-kilometre of passenger car transport has improved by 8 % between 1995 and 2006. The improvement in passenger cars' energy efficiency results partly from the voluntary agreement of the automotive manufacturing industries, as stated in the sixth annual report on the effectiveness of the Community's strategy to reduce CO2 emissions from passenger cars. The European Commission will propose a legislative framework, if possible in 2007 and at the latest by mid 2008, to achieve the EU objective of 120 g CO2/km, focusing on mandatory reductions of the emissions of CO2 to reach the objective of 130 g CO2/km for the average new car fleet by means of improvements in vehicle motor technology, and a further reduction of 10 g CO2/km, or equivalent if technically necessary, by other technological improvements and by an increased use of biofuels. Specific CO2 emissions from buses & coaches and two-wheelers were also reduced by 12 % and 10 % respectively over the same period.

With respect to freight transport, light duty vehicles (LDVs) emit approximately 2.5 times more CO2 per tonne-kilometre and therefore consume 2.5 times more energy per tonne-kilometre than heavy duty vehicles (HDVs). The specific CO2 emissions of LDVs have been reduced by 4 %, with the increased penetration of diesel vehicles and with general technical improvements in diesel or petrol trucks. The specific CO2 emissions of HDVs have been reduced by 10 % over the same period due to both technical improvements and increased activity.

Supporting information

Indicator definition

Specific CO2 emissions are defined as emissions of CO2 per transport unit (passenger-km or tonne-km), specified by mode (road, rail, inland, maritime, air).

CO2 emissions from new passengers cars are expressed in grams of CO2 per km (g CO2/km). The data, which are experimental, are measured in the vehicle type approval procedure.

Units

For passenger transport, specific CO2 emissions are expressed in g per passenger-kilometre (g/pkm).

For freight transport, specific CO2 emissions are expressed in g per tonne-kilometre (g/tkm).

For new passenger cars, tailpipe emissions are expressed in g per kilometre (g/km).


 

Policy context and targets

Context description

Since specific CO2 emissions are expressed per transport unit, occupancy rates and load factors have a considerable effect on specific emissions produced from passenger and freight transport respectively. Reductions of specific emissions can be achieved by increasing occupancy rates and load factors and/or by decreasing emissions per vehicle-km (e.g. by setting stricter emission standards and introducing more energy efficient technologies such as hybrid, plug-in hybrids, electric vehicles, etc).

Targets

There are no specific objectives or targets related to energy efficiency or specific CO2 emissions. Policy objectives are only set with respect to the CO2 emissions of passenger cars and light commercial vehicles. Regulation No 443/2009 specifies that each vehicle manufacturer must achieve a fleet-average CO2 emission target of 130 g/km by 2015 for all new cars registered in the EU. In order to meet the CO2 emission target of 120 g/km, additional measures, such as the use of biofuels, aim to further reduce emissions by of 10 g/km. The Regulation also defines a long-term target of 95 g/km to be reached after 2020.

The Vans Regulation No 510/2011 specifies a fleet-average CO2 emission target of 175 g/km to be phased in between 2014 and 2017 for newly registered vans in the EU. A long-term target of 147 g/km is specified for 2020.

As an additional incentive for the introduction of more energy efficient technologies (hybrid, plug-in hybrids, electric vehicles, electric vehicles with a range extender), vehicles with CO2 emissions below 50 g/km receive super-credits. For passenger cars, each such vehicle is counted as 3.5 cars in 2012 and 2013, 2.5 cars in 2014, 1.5 cars in 2015 and 1 car from 2016 onwards. For vans, each vehicle with CO2 emissions below 50 g/km is counted as 3.5 cars in 2014 and 2015, 2.5 cars in 2016, 1.5 cars in 2017, and 1 car from 2018 onwards.

Related policy documents

No related policy documents have been specified

 

Methodology

Methodology for indicator calculation

For passenger transport, specific emissions are calculated by dividing the CO2 emissions of each mode (i.e. road, rail, maritime and air transport) by the respective passenger-kilometres.

For freight transport, specific emissions are calculated by dividing the CO2 emissions of each mode (i.e. road, rail, inland shipping and maritime transport) by the respective tonne-kilometres.

For CO2 emissions from new passenger cars, data are compiled from DG-CLIMA monitoring 2000-2009, and from the EEA from 2010.

Methodology for gap filling

Passenger- and tonne-kilometres and CO2 emissions are modelled and therefore no gap filling is necessary.

Methodology references

No methodology references available.

 

Uncertainties

Methodology uncertainty

COPERT 4 is used for emissions calculations in EC4MACS. CO2 emissions are consistent with UNFCCC submissions.

Data sets uncertainty

Since the data on CO2 emissions, passenger-km and tonne-km are modelled rather than measured, the data must be treated as estimates. Data on CO2 emissions are less uncertain, as they are calibrated against statistical fuel consumption. Hence, the uncertainty of the passenger-km and tonne-km data characterises the overall uncertainty of the indicator. EC4MACS is not so accurate for calculating vehicle and tonne kilometres. This means that the overall uncertainty of passenger-km and tonne-km (as a modelled output) depends on the uncertainty of the underlying statistical data provided as input to the model. The latter may vary significantly among different countries, depending on the way data are collected and reported.

Rationale uncertainty

N/A

Data sources

Other info

DPSIR: Pressure
Typology: Descriptive indicator (Type A - What is happening to the environment and to humans?)
Indicator codes
  • TERM 027
Frequency of updates
This indicator is discontinued. No more assessments will be produced.
EEA Contact Info info@eea.europa.eu

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Filed under: transport
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