There are so, so , so many different things that give off carbon compounds, that it is very hard to estimate the quantity.
We do know that people and people's things are a very small fraction of total carbon emiissions compared to volcanoes, animal emissions, and burning oil and tar pits that have been burning for hundreds of years. Not even close, the largest quantity of 'greenhouse' gas in the atomosphere is water vapor: humidity.
Without these gases in the atmosphere, nearly all plants would die and all the land animals would be burnt to death by the Sun's heat. (That includes you and me!)
The average carbon footprint of a New Zealander per capita is 17 tonnes CO2-e.
It depends where this average person lives. The average North American generates 20 ton of CO2 a year. People in other parts of the world usually have a smaller carbon footprint.
around 5000000g per day.
The amount of carbon dioxide emissions from transport each day is part of a person's carbon footprint.
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces
A carbon footprint is the amount of carbon dioxide emitted from the use of fossil fuels, such as oil and gas. Each person, industry and group has its own carbon footprint.
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces. (Apex)
the amount of carbon he or she absorbs from the environment. APEX
The amount of carbon dioxide emissions from transport each day is part of a person's carbon footprint.
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces
According to the Nature Conservancy, the worldwide average is 5.5 tons of CO^2 eq/year per person. The data was at the end of their carbon footprint calculator quiz. http://www.nature.org/initiatives/climatechange/calculator/
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces
A carbon footprint is the amount of carbon dioxide emitted from the use of fossil fuels, such as oil and gas. Each person, industry and group has its own carbon footprint.
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces. (Apex)
the amount of carbon he or she absorbs from the environment. APEX
It means how much fossil fuels you use in your daily life.Each person has a carbon footprint of how much waste they produce.
A carbon footprint is the measure of how much carbon you and your activities and lifestyle cost the planet. High-consumption nations and lifestyles affect their carbon footprint. Developed countries use far more energy to run their businesses, transport and the personal lifestyles of their citizens. As energy now comes from burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), their carbon footprint is high.
Chemically, it is how much CH4 they cause to be burnt into CO2.
That's all of it - what you exhale PLUS all the fuel burned to support you.
It's not. China is the top polluting country, closely followed by the US. Australia is the top polluter, per capita, which means that any one person in Australia is responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions than one person in China. The average person in Australia has a bigger carbon footprint than the average Chinese.