Loading data from 1,813,558 emissions sources summarized from 662,637,077 assets.
News & Insights
Stay up to date on the latest from Climate TRACE as we share news, data, and insights that help the global community make meaningful climate action faster and easier.
If you search for your city on a new map and zoom in, you can see pollution drifting from factories, power plants, and ports into your neighborhood. The map—a first-of-its-kind air quality tool from Climate TRACE, a nonprofit coalition cofounded by former Vice President Al Gore—shows how pollution moves through cities.
A new interactive map from Climate Trace, a coalition of academics and analysts that tracks pollution and greenhouse gases, shows that PM2.5 and other toxins are being poured into the air near the homes of about 1.6 billion people.
The nonprofit Climate Trace, which Gore co-founded, on Wednesday launched a tool that uses AI to track fine particulate pollution from more than 660 million sources worldwide.
Most human economic activities release greenhouse gases into the Earth's atmosphere. We use satellites and other remote sensing technologies to spot these emissions activities.
A new interactive map and groundbreaking database from Climate TRACE allows people in the world’s largest metropolitan areas to track their air pollution exposure, along with their region’s biggest sources of planet-warming pollution.
Gore, who co-founded Climate TRACE, which uses satellites to monitor the location of heat-trapping methane sources, on Wednesday expanded his system to track the source and plume of pollution from tiny particles, often referred to as soot, on a neighborhood basis for 2,500 cities across the world.
Since our first data release in 2021, Climate TRACE has tracked greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and have now added non-GHG air pollutants for the world’s largest sources of emissions.
Climate TRACE has developed a global air emissions dataset that provides unprecedented transparency into greenhouse gas (GHG) and non-GHG emissions. To further illuminate the direct impacts of air pollution, Climate TRACE has released plumes data and a web-based tool to visualize this data. This new platform moves beyond annual inventories to provide a current, intuitive look at how harmful particulate matter (PM2.5) from major industrial sources travels and disperses, empowering communities, policymakers, and journalists to connect specific sources of pollution to local air quality.
New Climate TRACE tool enables anyone to see air pollution plumes flow out of sources that contribute to the climate crisis and into more than 2,500 urban areas.
Financed emissions accounting is emerging as a standard tool to measure the carbon impact of investment and lending portfolios and to guide capital toward real-world decarbonization. Advances in highly granular, near-real-time geospatial data now provide unprecedented visibility into asset-level emissions, creating new opportunities for targeted, high-impact investment. Hosted and moderated by Climate TRACE, this webinar included panelists from Climate Risk Services, Joint Impact Model, PCAF, and RMI's Center for Climate-Aligned Finance.