Study
Greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household): Year ended 2019
en-NZDefinitions and metadata
Environmental-economic accounts: Sources and methods (third edition) presents the data sources and methods used for each of Stats NZ’s environmental-economic accounts, including Greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household): Year ended 2019.
Economic activity is measured as chain-volume value added. Average annual changes relate to the 2007–19 period.
Industries are classified according to the Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification 2006 (ANZSIC06), and align with economic statistics, such as GDP and employment.
System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA)
The SEEA production-based emissions estimates transform New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory data to be consistent with economic classifications and concepts by changing the unit of analysis (from a process-based approach, for example, energy and waste, to the standard production-based industrial classification, ANZSIC06) and applying the residency principle. This means deducting emissions from non-residents operating on the domestic territory (for example, international tourists driving vehicles) and adding emissions from residents operating overseas (for example, international aviation or shipping).
The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by industry and households are compiled using the SEEA framework, and show the contributions made by industry and household to emissions. These emissions estimates are aligned to economic statistics, allowing us to compare emissions with economic output and derive emissions intensity for each industry.
Emissions included in the accounts
The GHG emissions by industry and household accounts include the gross emissions from resident New Zealand industries and households, regardless of where the emission occurs. This is different to the Ministry for the Environment’s data in New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory which records gross and net emissions on the domestic territory only. This difference in scope generally results in higher emissions being recorded in the greenhouse gas emissions by industry and household account, due to the deduction of emissions from non-residents operating on the domestic territory and addition of emissions from residents operating overseas. For more information please refer to Environmental-economic accounts: Sources and methods – Greenhouse gas emissions section.
Emissions are calculated for 116 industries, households, and tourism (a cross-cutting industry), for the following gas types:
carbon dioxide (CO2)
methane (CH4)
nitrous oxide (N2O)
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs)
perfluorocarbons (PFCs)
sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)
Emissions are expressed in carbon dioxide equivalents, which are the emissions of greenhouse gases weighted by their 100-year global warming potential.
Revisions 2019
This release contains revisions arising from new and more up-to-date information.
The most notable changes include revisions in the input data due to methodological and measurement improvements – input data sources include the New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory, national accounts, tourism satellite account, and external energy data.
Relationship between annual and quarterly greenhouse gas emissions accounts
The annual GHG emissions account incorporates the latest New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory data with comparable economic production data, to show industry and household emissions contributions.
Our quarterly GHG emissions account uses the annual emissions account as a base and using indicators, projects future quarters, giving more timely emissions estimates. Greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household): September 2020 quarter – methodology and results has more information on the sources and methods used to create quarterly estimates.
Note: The quarterly greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household) account is currently experimental.
Reference periods
Greenhouse gas emissions accounts are produced for a year ended December. This aligns with the Greenhouse Gas Inventory reference period.
Some economic data, such as the tourism satellite account, is produced annually for a March year. To make this comparable to the emissions data, the economic data is recalculated proportionately to a December year.
en-NZMethodology
Environmental-economic accounts: Sources and methods (third edition) en-NZ |
Release content
Greenhouse gas emissions (industry and household): Year ended 2019 en-NZ |