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24Earth curated data

Country Environmental Profiles

Environmental data needs a story, a date, and a boundary. Explore 9 reviewed country profiles that connect emissions, energy, land, climate risk, and biodiversity without turning a global database into hundreds of thin pages.

  • 9 curated profiles
  • Indicator-specific dates
  • Snapshot 2026.07

Choose a country story

Each page has its own thesis, historical charts, cross-indicator interpretation, source ledger, and editorial review.

BRASouth America

Brazil

A highly renewable power system contrasts with severe net forest loss, large agricultural emissions, and rising fossil CO₂ since 1990.

CO₂ per person
2.28 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
87.3% (2024)
CANNorth America

Canada

Hydro-rich electricity and falling per-person CO₂ coexist with very high energy use, fossil production, and rapidly changing northern risks.

CO₂ per person
13.42 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
64.3% (2024)
CHNEast Asia

China

The world's largest power system is adding renewables at extraordinary scale while coal, industrial demand, and ecological pressure remain decisive.

CO₂ per person
8.66 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
33.7% (2024)
DEUEurope

Germany

A deep emissions decline and renewable-led power mix coexist with remaining coal, gas, and broader land and biodiversity constraints.

CO₂ per person
6.77 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
59.1% (2025)
INDSouth Asia

India

Very low per-person energy use meets rapidly growing demand, coal-heavy electricity, major agricultural emissions, and high climate exposure.

CO₂ per person
2.20 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
19.8% (2024)
IDNSoutheast Asia

Indonesia

Fast-rising energy demand and coal-heavy power sit beside globally important forests, biodiversity, and high modeled climate exposure.

CO₂ per person
2.87 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
18.1% (2024)
JPNEast Asia

Japan

Emissions and energy use are falling, but coal and gas still dominate power while nuclear recovery and renewable growth reshape the mix.

CO₂ per person
7.77 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
22.9% (2024)
ZAFSouthern Africa

South Africa

Coal still defines electricity and emissions, while renewable growth, energy-access needs, biodiversity, and adaptation capacity pull policy together.

CO₂ per person
6.87 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
12.5% (2024)
USANorth America

United States

Emissions have fallen from their mid-2000s peak, but absolute output, per-capita energy use, and agricultural emissions remain high.

CO₂ per person
14.20 t/person (2024)
Renewable electricity
25.6% (2025)

The same questions, 9 country contexts

Observation years are shown in every cell. Do not mistake asynchronous releases for a single-year league table.

Selected indicators for 9 curated countries, with observation year
IndicatorBrazilCanadaChinaGermanyIndiaIndonesiaJapanSouth AfricaUnited States
CO₂ per person2.28 t/personObserved 202413.42 t/personObserved 20248.66 t/personObserved 20246.77 t/personObserved 20242.20 t/personObserved 20242.87 t/personObserved 20247.77 t/personObserved 20246.87 t/personObserved 202414.20 t/personObserved 2024
Renewable electricity87.3%Observed 202464.3%Observed 202433.7%Observed 202459.1%Observed 202519.8%Observed 202418.1%Observed 202422.9%Observed 202412.5%Observed 202425.6%Observed 2025
Primary energy per person14,773 kWh/personObserved 202490,374 kWh/personObserved 202435,222 kWh/personObserved 202434,821 kWh/personObserved 20247,573 kWh/personObserved 202411,762 kWh/personObserved 202437,096 kWh/personObserved 202424,699 kWh/personObserved 202481,610 kWh/personObserved 2024
Net forest-area change−3,256,050 ha/yearObserved 2025−9,819 ha/yearObserved 2025+1,611,000 ha/yearObserved 2025+4,800 ha/yearObserved 2025+86,000 ha/yearObserved 2025+81,480 ha/yearObserved 2025−2,200 ha/yearObserved 2025+87,566 ha/yearObserved 2025−72,000 ha/yearObserved 2025
Population211.1 millionObserved 202339.3 millionObserved 20231.423 billionObserved 202384.5 millionObserved 20231.438 billionObserved 2023281.2 millionObserved 2023124.4 millionObserved 202363.2 millionObserved 2023343.5 millionObserved 2023

What each profile answers

No single indicator is allowed to stand in for the whole environmental record.

Emissions

Absolute and per-capita territorial CO₂, historical direction, peaks, and accounting boundaries.

Energy transition

The latest electricity recipe, renewable history, and the wider primary-energy context.

Land and food

Net forest-area change and agricultural greenhouse gases, with non-overlapping boundaries made explicit.

Risk and nature

Modeled climate exposure, vulnerability, readiness, extinction-risk direction, and KBA protection.

Publication is an editorial decision

Curated coverage

A data API can return hundreds of country names in seconds. It cannot decide whether the sources are reusable, whether two indicators share a boundary, or what the numbers mean in a specific country. 24Earth publishes a route only after the data, original summary, charts, interpretation, limitations, and unique insights are reviewed.

No auto-publishingSource updates create a candidate snapshot, never a page.
Real 404sUnreviewed country slugs do not resolve to generic profiles.
Per-series datesEvery value carries its own observation year and source.

Open where possible, cautious where necessary

Snapshot 2026.07, retrieved 14 July 2026.

No IEA dataset is redistributed. Energy use comes from U.S. EIA public-domain data; modern electricity rows use Ember. Biodiversity aggregates are attributed for display but excluded from 24Earth downloads while original reuse rights are reviewed.