Estimate Your Carbon Footprint and Your Own Carbon Dioxide Emissions

Like the quest to act sustainably with resources and to be self-sufficient, carbon dioxide emissions are a personal responsibility as well as a national one. Your individual carbon footprint showcases your personal impact.

Your total footprint is the amount of greenhouse gases you produce in units of carbon dioxide via your net activities, such as electrical, oil and gas use, travel (car, train, plane, bike), and consumption of consumer goods and food that release carbon dioxide during processing and transport.

Things such as replacing light bulbs with more efficient LED ones, and using wind and solar power for your home, solar hot water units can make a big difference. However renewable energy is complicated and expensive and there are many simpler things you can do immediately.

We are all in this together and collectively individuals can make a difference. One of the keys to understanding what you can do is the visualize where most of your carbon dioxide emissions are coming from. Is it your electricity use? Is it your daily transport? Is it you airline travel?

This article provides a simple tool for calculating your own carbon footprint and seeing what activity is contributing most carbon dioxide.

One impact of the carbon footprint is on sea level rise and inundation of low lying nations
One impact of the carbon footprint is on sea level rise and inundation of low lying nations. Source: Pubic Domain
Highest per capita contributors to man made carbon dioxide
Highest per capita contributors to man made carbon dioxide. Source: Pubic Domain
Ancient footprints of early man preserved in mud turned to stone.
Ancient footprints of early man preserved in mud turned to stone. Source: Pubic Domain
Buzz Aldrin's footprint on the moon
Buzz Aldrin's footprint on the moon. Source: Pubic Domain
The impact of various degrees of Global Warming
The impact of various degrees of Global Warming. Source: Pubic Domain

How to Calculate Your Own Carbon Footprint

There are a number of free online tools with varying degrees of complexity and accuracy:

To make a very simple estimate of your carbon emissions simply print the table below.

Make the calculations for each of the items shown, using the multipiers and add up the results.

While not as accurate as other methods it will be a good guide in relative terms.

It will show what are the major sources of carbon dioxide for your lifestyle and situation.

This will highlight the changes that are likely to be most effective in reducing your own footprint.

Find the two or three items with the largest totals and these will be the ones you should focus on first.

Experiment with various scenarios to examine how various changes you make will affect the outcome in the results and the totals.

See what sort of changes would be required to reduce your footprint by:

Explore the range of options available to achieve these targets.

Carbon Footprint Calculation Sheet to Estimate Total Tons of Carbon Dioxide You Emit Each Year


Carbon Source
Your Value
Multiplier
Result
Monthly Electricity Bill ($)
 
105
 
Monthly Gas Bill ($)
 
105
 
Monthly Oil Bill ($)
 
113
 
Total Annual mileage for your car (miles per year)
 
0.8
 
Number of airplane flights less that 4 hours duration
 
1100
 
Number of airplane flights more that 4 hours duration
 
4400
 
Add 184 if you do not recycle newspapers and other paper
 
add 185
 
Add 166 if you do not recycle tin cans and aluminum cans
 
add 166
 
TOTAL
-------
(sum the results)
 

How Do You Compare?

There are a number of general categories for footprint size (Total score in table above):

How Can I Reduce the Size of My Carbon Footprint?

How to Reduce Your Electricity and Heating/Cooling Bills

Other Methods

Focus on the two or three other items that contribute most to the results in the table.