Consumers and Energy Sector See 7% Emission Surge

Consumers and Energy Sector See 7% Emission Surge

ParcelHero Celebrates a Green Win… but Not All the Sector Is Aced

Good news alert: The UK’s own ParcelHero says the transport and storage sector has been a real eco‑hero, cutting its CO₂e emissions by 9% in 2021 – the biggest swoop of any industry in the country.

Meanwhile, consumer habits and the energy sector have taken a turn for the worse, bumping up emissions by 7% over the same period. And, unsurprisingly, consumers are now the biggest culprits of UK greenhouse gas pollution, accounting for 26% of the national total.

What the Numbers Say

  • UK total emissions dropped from a peak of 852 Mt CO₂e back in 1991 to just over 502 Mt CO₂e in 2021 – a 41% slash.
  • The transport and storage sector went from a high of 99 Mt CO₂e in 2005 to a low of 57 Mt CO₂e in 2021, down 42%.
  • Road freight alone dropped from a peak of 15 Mt CO₂e in 1997 to 13 Mt CO₂e in 2021.
  • Energy company emissions rose from 80 Mt CO₂e in 2020 to 86 Mt CO₂e in 2021.
  • Consumer emissions (think heating and travel) jumped from 125 Mt CO₂e in 2020 to 134 Mt CO₂e in 2021.

Checking the Footprint: The “Home‑Delivery” Debunk

Remember all the talk that the boom in home deliveries during lockdowns would skyrocket pollution? Turns out, transport and warehouse emissions actually fell thanks to:

  • Greener delivery vans.
  • Less rush‑hour traffic after people started working from home.
  • More successful first‑time deliveries, reducing return trips.

Only a tiny uptick was seen in postal and courier services: from 1.79 Mt CO₂e in 2019 to 1.8 Mt CO₂e in 2021. That tiny increase is washed out by a 10 Mt CO₂e reduction in general consumer travel.

Covid’s Big Chill on the Skies

Air transport was the first to feel the knock. From 41 Mt CO₂e in 2019, the sector plummeted 58% to 17 Mt CO₂e in 2020, and a further drop to 16.8 Mt CO₂e in 2021 as flights struggled to pick up steam again.

What Does All This Mean?

When UK emissions fell from 550 Mt CO₂e in 2019 to 488 Mt CO₂e in 2020, a clear message emerged: remote work reduces our carbon footprint. If we keep the home‑office trend alive and cut back on international flights, we can give the planet a chance to breathe easier and fight global warming.

—“The good news is… but let’s not get too comfortable,” says David Jinks, ParcelHero’s Head of Consumer Research.