Egypt vs Indonesia

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Per-capita emissions are higher in Indonesia than in Egypt: roughly ~0.6 tCO₂e/person/year more, or about 29% higher. Globally, Egypt ranks around #47 and Indonesia around #45 by CO₂ per capita. Both can be compared to the global median of ~4.7 tCO₂e per person.

CO₂ per capita

Lower is better
Winner: Egypt. Egypt ~2.2 tCO₂e/yearIndonesia ~2.9 tCO₂e/yearEgypt leads by 0.6 t (29%)
Egypt
~2.2 tCO₂e/year
Indonesia
~2.9 tCO₂e/year

World median: ~~4.7 tCO₂e/year

Consumption-based CO₂ per capita

Lower is better
Winner: Egypt. Egypt ~2.2 tCO₂e/yearIndonesia ~2.6 tCO₂e/yearEgypt leads by 0.4 t (17%)
Egypt
~2.2 tCO₂e/year
Indonesia
~2.6 tCO₂e/year

World median: ~~6.5 tCO₂e/year

Electricity carbon intensity

Lower is better
Winner: Egypt. Egypt ~575 gCO₂/kWhIndonesia ~680 gCO₂/kWhEgypt leads by 106 g (18%)
Egypt
~575 gCO₂/kWh
Indonesia
~680 gCO₂/kWh

World median: ~~345 gCO₂/kWh

Renewable electricity share

Higher is better
Egypt ~11%Winner: Indonesia. Indonesia ~18%Indonesia leads by 7 pp
Egypt
~11%
Indonesia
~18%

World median: ~~34%

Key takeaways

Egypt has much lower per-capita emissions and lower consumption-based emissions while Indonesia has much higher per-capita emissions and slightly higher consumption-based emissions.

Quick comparison

Indonesia has higher per-capita emissions (~2.9 tCO₂e/person/year) than Egypt (~2.2 tCO₂e/person/year). The difference is about ~-0.6 tCO₂e/person/year, or about 23% lower.

In the global ranking by CO₂ per capita, Egypt stands around #47 and Indonesia around #45.

Egypt is below the global median (~4.7 tCO₂e/person), about 53% below.

Indonesia is below the global median (~4.7 tCO₂e/person), about 40% below.

Within Africa, Egypt sits above the regional median (~1.8 tCO₂e/person).

Within Asia, Indonesia sits below the regional median (~6.7 tCO₂e/person).

Why the numbers can differ

GDP per capita often correlates with energy use: higher incomes tend to mean more transport, heating, and consumption. The relationship is not fixed—policy, energy mix, and urban design can decouple emissions from economic activity.

Urbanization affects transport patterns and building energy use. Denser cities can support public transit and district heating; sprawl tends to increase car dependency and per-capita emissions.

Electricity carbon intensity and the share of renewables in the power mix influence how much emissions drop when transport and heating electrify. Cleaner grids amplify the benefit of electric vehicles and heat pumps.

How to interpret per-capita vs total

Per-capita emissions divide a country's total CO₂ output by its population. That lets us compare nations fairly regardless of size. A large country with high total emissions can still have low per-person emissions if its population is very large. Total emissions matter for the global climate, but per-capita figures help us understand lifestyle and policy differences between countries.

What would move the gap

Targeted actions depend on each country's starting point. Levers that can narrow or reverse the gap include:

  • Increasing renewable share in electricity generation
  • Retrofitting older buildings with heat pumps
  • Shifting diets toward less carbon-intensive foods
  • Improving industrial process efficiency
  • Electrifying industrial heating and process heat
  • Reducing food waste along the supply chain
  • Switching to renewable electricity and heat pumps for heating
  • Improving building insulation and energy efficiency
  • Expanding public transit and active mobility
  • Cutting down on air travel and long-haul freight

Data sources

  • CO₂ per capita, territorial emissions: OWID (2024, 2024)
  • Electricity carbon intensity: OWID / Ember (latest available)
  • Renewables share of electricity: OWID / Ember (latest available)
  • Ember: electricity mix, carbon intensity

Related comparisons

CO₂ per capita rankings · All countries

Frequently asked questions

Which country has higher CO2 per capita: Egypt or Indonesia?

Indonesia has higher per-capita emissions (~2.9 tCO₂e/person/year) than Egypt (~2.2 tCO₂e/person/year).

How do per-capita emissions differ from total emissions?

Per-capita emissions divide total national emissions by population, allowing fair comparison across countries of different sizes. Total emissions matter for global impact; per-capita figures help compare lifestyle and policy.

How does Egypt compare to the global median?

About 53% below the global median of ~4.7 tCO₂e per person.

How does Indonesia compare to the global median?

About 40% below the global median of ~4.7 tCO₂e per person.

Does this include consumption-based emissions?

The main figure is territorial (production-based). We also show consumption-based CO₂ per capita when available, which counts emissions embedded in imported goods.

How often is this data updated?

Data comes from Our World in Data, World Bank, and Ember. Coverage and latest year vary by metric.