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VOOZH | about |
All Climate TRACE data are free and publicly available to enable action and accountability at the massive scale necessary for global progress. This page offers access to our bulk download packages and information on our beta API.
We recommend getting familiar with how Climate TRACE data are created and structured by reviewing our FAQs, resources, and guidance:
When you download data, you will be prompted to voluntarily share details about your potential use of the data. This information helps us to further enhance the Climate TRACE platform, and we encourage you to respond. If you later publish research, launch a product, or otherwise find value in Climate TRACE, we’d love to hear about it.
Download packages are the simplest way to access Climate TRACE data in bulk and is the best choice for most users. You can either download all emissions data for a country, or all global emissions data for a sector.
Each download package includes CSVs of:
Packages also include a copy of the data guide and the detailed data schema for the sector. For more information on what has changed from our last release, please refer to the changelog available via Github.
Uncertainty estimates are available for all sectors, on request. Please get in touch using the contact page.
Geospatial data for sources based on administrative or urban boundaries is available for download here as a geopackage.
You can now also access comprehensive inventories for cities and subnational areas like counties, districts, provinces and states via the Explore page. Use the search bar to select the region of interest and use the download button at the bottom right corner of the page to download csv files that contain source-level emissions estimates for all the assets and facilities located within the region that Climate TRACE estimates as well as sector level estimates to account for the assets and facilities that Climate TRACE is not yet estimating emissions for at the source-level.
You can now download a global dataset that lists the top emission reduction strategy identified for every source in the Climate TRACE database. Each row shows the estimated annual reduction in CO₂-equivalent emissions that could be achieved if that strategy were implemented at that facility. If you sum the reductions across all rows, you’ll see the theoretical total reduction that could be achieved if the best available option were applied everywhere.
Data scientists and other expert users that are experienced in programmatically interacting with databases may be interested to try the Climate TRACE API, now available in beta. The API supports search for emitting assets by sector, owner, and location; query to get emissions and other asset details; and lookup of aggregated emission by countries. Read details in the API Reference.
As a beta release, we cannot guarantee availability of the Climate TRACE API; please keep volume low and use it with caution in production settings. We’d love to learn more about how you hope to use the API. Please share your work and ideas or ask any technical questions about the API on our Contact page.
In a handful of sectors, the full Climate TRACE dataset includes higher resolution gridded and other geospatial data than is available in the download packages. Specifically, that includes:
Due to the large file size, these versions of the data are available only upon request. Before making a request for the data, please first examine the download packages and determine if those might satisfy your needs. If you are interested in the most detailed version of the data, please contact us to let us know which sector you’re interested in, and arrange a file transfer.