CO2 Per Capita in North America: Country Ranking

Per capita CO₂ emissions vary across North America. This page ranks countries by tCO₂e per person per year, shows the regional median, and compares it to the global median. Use it to explore regional patterns and find country profiles.

CO2 per capita in North America: overview

Median CO₂ per capita
~13.4 tCO₂/person/yr
vs global median
183% above global
Countries with data
3
Range
3.514.2 tCO₂/person/yr

Based on latest available year per country. Global median ≈ 4.7 tCO₂e/person/yr.

How North America compares to the global median

The global median CO₂ per capita—the middle value when all countries with data are sorted—sits around 4.7 tonnes per person per year. North America's median of ~13.4 tCO₂e means that the typical country in this region emits more per person than the global middle. Regional differences reflect energy use, transport patterns, industrial structure, and development levels. North America and Oceania tend to rank above the global median; Africa and parts of Asia often rank below.

Climate targets often aim for per capita emissions of about 2–3 tonnes by 2050. Comparing your region to the global median helps put progress in perspective. Explore the global ranking for the full picture.

Why countries differ within North America

Even within a single region, per capita emissions vary widely. High-emitting countries often combine fossil-fuel-intensive industry, high car ownership, energy-intensive heating or cooling, and sometimes oil or gas production or refining. Low-emitting countries tend to have lower energy use per person, more public transport, less industrialization, or a larger share of hydropower or renewables.

Small countries with unusual economies—financial hubs, aviation centers, or oil exporters—can show extreme per capita figures. Territorial emissions count what is produced within borders, so cross-border fuel sales or commuters can distort small economies. Consumption-based accounting assigns emissions to the consumer country and can shift the picture for high-import nations. Check our methodology for how data is sourced.

Top emitters and low emitters in North America

The table below ranks all countries in North America by CO₂ per capita. The top 10 and bottom 10 highlight the spread within the region.

Top 10 in North America

Countries with the highest per capita emissions in the region often have heavy industry, fossil fuel extraction, or high car and energy use.

  1. United States~14.2 tCO₂e/person (2024)
  2. Canada~13.4 tCO₂e/person (2024)
  3. Mexico~3.5 tCO₂e/person (2024)

Bottom 10 in North America

Lower per capita emissions typically reflect less energy use, fewer cars, or less industry. Low emissions do not automatically mean strong climate policy—they often relate to development levels.

  1. Mexico~3.5 tCO₂e/person (2024)
  2. Canada~13.4 tCO₂e/person (2024)
  3. United States~14.2 tCO₂e/person (2024)

Top emitters (per capita)

~14.2
Canada
~13.4
Mexico
~3.5

Per-capita CO₂, not total emissions.

Per capita ranking (all countries)

All countries with data, sorted by tCO₂e per person.

Share of total regional emissions

United States• Largest share

83% share • 4.9 Gt

United States83%
Canada9%
Mexico8%

Top 5 countries by total emissions, plus Others. Based on latest available year.

How to use this ranking

Use this table to sort countries by emissions, explore individual profiles, and compare neighbors. Each country links to a detailed page with more metrics and context. For side-by-side comparison, use the compare tool linked below.

Sort:
#CountrytCO₂/person/yrYear
1United States~14.22024
2Canada~13.42024
3Mexico~3.52024

Countries in North America

All countries we track in North America: United States, Canada, Mexico.

Next steps