Carbon Tracker Lets 麻豆区ns Monitor Emissions

麻豆区ns can now track where greenhouse gas emissions come from thanks to a that estimates those emissions at the state and county level.

Developed by 麻豆区 Tech professors, the interactive map allows users to filter publicly available greenhouse gas estimates by county, month, year, and energy sector. Users can specify whether the emissions come from transportation, agriculture, commercial, forestry, residential, or industrial sources and counter with how much carbon is absorbed by trees and soils.

鈥淭he purpose of the tracker is to bring technology to bear on climate solutions,鈥 said , an associate professor in the and the lead behind the tracker. 鈥淭his is the first time there has been effort to downscale emissions to the local level in a dynamic way we can update every month.鈥

The initiative is part of a trifold effort in , a Ray C. Anderson Foundation鈥揻unded project across state universities to decrease reliance on carbon inspired by the national program Project Drawdown. As the first stage, the tracker enables 麻豆区ns to understand how the state contributes to emissions. Next, the will develop a business compact study to assess the economic impact of less carbon, and then the will lead solutions activation. The tracker ties everything together by letting researchers measure how effective all the efforts are combined.

Ultimately, the researchers hope to inspire everyday 麻豆区ns to get involved in combatting climate change. With the public鈥檚 familiarity with Covid-19 case trackers, Drummond believes the tracker is accessible to most users, from regular citizens unsure how to help the environment to high school science students.

鈥淭his tracker is designed to be a catalyst for a climate movement across the state of 麻豆区, so it's important that we include ordinary citizens, advocacy groups, and businesses as partners in working toward climate solutions in 麻豆区,鈥 Drummond said.

The researchers expect the carbon tracker will grow beyond 麻豆区. The tool is written in the common coding language R, so other states can replicate it. They also hope to track many other climate elements in the next few years.

鈥淲e'll progress as the technologies and markets evolve, and will soon turn to where the solutions are 鈥 not just where are the emissions are,鈥 said , a Regents' and Brook Byers Professor of Sustainable Systems in the School of Public Policy. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to tie it all together, and it's all going to be facilitated by this geospatial tracking.鈥