US Emissions Set for Record Dive With Factories and Cars Idled

Highway 83 sits empty of traffic in Baltimore on April 25.
Highway 83 sits empty of traffic in Baltimore on April 25. (Alex Wroblewski/Bloomberg News)

[Ensure you have all the info you need in these unprecedented times. Subscribe now.]

Greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. are poised for a record plunge this year, the result of coronavirus lockdown orders that have shuttered factories, closed stores and left cars and jets sitting idle.

Energy-related carbon dioxide emissions, which include electricity generation and transportation fuel, will fall 14%, according to data released June 9 by the Energy Information Administration.

That’s almost double the decline the agency had forecast in April when it became clear that electricity consumption had slumped as the COVID-19 pandemic reshaped the U.S. economy. The earlier prediction for a 7.5% drop would have been the most this century.



The trend will likely start to reverse as stay-at-home orders are lifted and the economy recovers. The EIA expects electricity consumption to decline 5.7% this year, and then rebound by 1% in 2021. Emissions are also expected to creep up next year.

Even though air pollution levels are down around the world, the decreased activity this year is not expected to move the needle appreciably on climate change. The amount of emissions going back more than a century is so big that even a historic decline from the U.S., the world’s second-biggest emitter, isn’t slowing the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which reached a record in May.

Want more news? Listen to today's daily briefing: