@inbook{22400, author = {Lenny Bernstein and Joyashree Roy and K. K Casey Delhotal and Jochen Harnisch and Ryuji Matsuhashi and Lynn K Price and Kanako Tanaka and Ernst Worrell and Francis Yamba and Zhou Fengqi}, title = {Industry}, abstract = {

This chapter addresses past, ongoing, and short (to 2010) and medium-term (to 2030) future actionsthat can be taken to mitigate GHG emissions from the manufacturing and process industries.

Globally, and in most countries, CO2 accounts for more than 90% of CO2-eq GHG emissions fromthe industrial sector (Price et al., 2006; US EPA, 2006b). These CO2 emissions arise from threesources: (1) the use of fossil fuels for energy, either directly by industry for heat and power genera-tion or indirectly in the generation of purchased electricity and steam; (2) non-energy uses of fossilfuels in chemical processing and metal smelting; and (3) non-fossil fuel sources, for example ce-15 ment and lime manufacture. Industrial processes also emit other GHGs.

}, year = {2007}, journal = {Climate Change 2007: Mitigation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA.}, note = {

Contribution of Working group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [B. Metz, O.R. Davidson, P.R. Bosch, R. Dave, L.A. Meyer (eds)]

}, language = {English}, }