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The IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas
Inventories are approved internationally and developed through an
international process which has included:
- wide dissemination of drafts and collection of comments from
national experts;
- testing of methods through development of preliminary inventories;
- country studies which ensure that methods are tested in a wide
variety of national contexts;
- technical and regional workshops held in Africa, Asia, Latin
America, Central Europe and Western Europe;
- informal expert groups convened to recommend improvements on
specific aspects of the methodology.
The IPCC Guidelines were first accepted in 1994
and published in 1995. UNFCCC COP3 held in 1997 in Kyoto reaffirmed
that the Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas
Inventories should be used as "methodologies for estimating anthropogenic
emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases"
in calculation of legally-binding targets during the first commitment
period.
The Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines contain three volumes, each of
which provides assistance to the analyst in the preparation of national
GHG inventories. The Workbook (Volume 2) is also available in
French, Spanish and Russian. Click
here for a summary of the changes between the 1995 Guidelines
and the Revised 1996 Guidelines.
The series consists of three volumes:
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The Reporting
Instructions (Volume 1) provides step-by-step directions
for assembling, documenting and transmitting completed national
inventory data consistently, regardless of the method used to
produce the estimates. These instructions are intended for all
users of the IPCC Guidelines and provide the primary
means of ensuring that all reports are consistent and comparable.
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The Workbook
(Volume 2) contains suggestions about planning and getting
started on a national inventory for participants who do not
have a national inventory available already and are not experienced
in producing such inventories. It also contains step-by-step
instructions for calculating emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2)
and methane (CH4), as well as some other trace gases,
from six major emission source categories. It is intended to
help experts in as many countries as possible to start developing
inventories.
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The Reference Manual (Volume 3)
provides a compendium of information on methods for estimation
of emissions for a broader range of greenhouse gases and a complete
list of source types for each. It summarises a range of possible
methods for many source types. It also provides summaries of
the scientific basis for the inventory methods recommended and
gives extensive references to the technical literature.
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