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Qatar
Photograph by Sean Gallup, Getty Images
Qatar's carbon emissions per capita are the highest in the world and three times as high as the United States'.
According to the Living Planet Report, produced by the World Wildlife Fund and the Global Footprint Network, among others, if every human being lived like the average Qatari, the Earth would need nearly five times more resources than it has.
As it is, humans are using 50 percent more resources than the Earth can replenish in a year. In other words, humans use the equivalent of 1.5 planets per year. By 2030, humans will use the equivalent of two planets each year.
When the world's leaders convene in Rio de Janeiro in June, the planet's "biocapacity"—how much life the Earth can physically support—will surely be a topic of discussion. And Global Footprint's data show that humans all around the world are using more resources than there is biocapacity to support them.
Why is Qatar highest on the list of consumers? The oil pumped from the desert country's rich sands isn't counted against the country's consumption (unless it's burned in-state), but energy usage is sky-high in this Middle Eastern country. Citizens are provided with free electricity and free water, which the Guardian's Fred Pearce described in a 2010 column as "liquid electricity," since water in the Middle East is often produced by desalinating seawater, an energy-intensive activity. (In this photo, taken in October 2011, window washers return to the ground along the facade of the 52-story Tornado Tower.)
Energy demand is rising by 7 percent a year to run the desalinators and air conditioners that maintain life in the desert and the natural gas production equipment that funds it.
—Rachel Kaufman
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Kuwait
Photograph by Gustavo Ferrari, AP
Burning tires in a dump pour black smoke into the air as firefighters and officials look on.
The tire fire, which broke out in Rhayya, 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of Kuwait City, burned for more than ten hours last month.
As in nearby Qatar, gas prices in Kuwait are among the lowest in the world, while GDP is among the highest. This, coupled with a lack of public transit infrastructure, makes road travel the sole means of mobility for both citizens and businesses moving goods. According to the Global Footprint Network, the average Kuwaiti uses 22 times more resources than the country provides per person.
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United Arab Emirates
Photograph by Karim Sahib, AFP/Getty Images
Despite being the world's fourth largest oil exporter (behind Saudi Arabia, Russia, and Iran), the United Arab Emirates has publicly pushed for a renewal of the Kyoto protocol (the agreement among industrialized nations to cap emissions), announced a plan to increase renewable energy production, and even launched a 1-gigawatt concentrated solar generation project.
Yet Dubai, a city of 1.5 million people (many of whom are immigrants seeking their fortunes, like the workers pictured above), the world's largest shopping mall, and an indoor ski resort, currently gets all its energy needs from the burning of natural gas, which is why it ranks third on Global Footprint's list.
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Denmark
Photograph by Ola Torkelsson, AFP/Getty Images
A Danish farmer surveys his Christmas trees shortly before they are sold in December 2008.
Denmark's carbon emissions are half that of the United States', but its cropland (the amount of viable land that can be used to produce crops) requirements are much higher. Because so much meat is eaten per capita in Denmark, the country must import a large amount of grain—so much that it would take up 215,000 square feet (2 hectares) of land per person, or 2.5 times more land than the country has.
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United States
Photograph by Michael S. Yamashita, National Geographic
New York City twinkles at night, with Fifth Avenue and Broadway clogged with cars.
If everyone lived like the average American, the Earth's annual production of resources would be depleted by the end of March, the Global Footprint Network's report said.
Americans' love of road trips, suspicion of public transit, and growing energy demands fuel the country's high per-capita carbon emissions.
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Belgium
Photograph by Alain Daussin, Getty Images
A Belgian farmer drives his tractor in this undated photo.
Belgium's biocapacity of cropland is extremely low, so much of its food must be imported. This begins to explain Belgium's high ranking on Global Footprint's list.
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Australia
Photograph by Cary Wolinsky, National Geographic
A lumberman cuts down a karri tree, a type of eucalyptus, in Western Australia.
Australians emit 28.1 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent per person, one of the highest per-capita rates in the world. In addition, the country's demand for wood, food, and pasture uses the equivalent of 753,000 square feet (7 hectares) of land per person, nearly four times greater than what is available on average around the world.
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Canada
Photograph from Panoramic Images/National Geographic
Canada's biocapacity is 14.92 hectares per capita, 5.5 times average global consumption. So if the world's resources were as abundant everywhere as in Canada, we'd have more than enough to go around.
Even so, Canada's cities are energy hogs. The country has the seventh highest rate of carbon dioxide emissions per capita. Total greenhouse gas emissions in Canada rose 24 percent between 1990 and 2008.
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The Netherlands
Photograph by Vincent Jannink, European Pressphoto Agency
Sheep near a village in the Netherlands will go toward feeding Dutch citizens, yes, but for the most part, the Dutch consume more than they produce.
The small country, with its high population density and relatively little land area for crops and pasture, consumes six times more resources (energy, food, and more) than it is able to produce, and about three times more than the Earth overall is able to sustain.
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Ireland
Photograph by Hon F. Lau, Alamy
A fuel farm on the outskirts of Dublin, Ireland, grows rapeseed (canola) plants to ultimately make biofuel.
In 2008, however, Ireland's greenhouse gas emissions per capita were the second highest in the European Union.
Agriculture is the largest source of emissions, but emissions from vehicles have more than doubled since 1998.
However, there have been improvements in recent years: 2009 was the second year in a row in which transport emissions declined, and an increase in renewable sources of energy in the early 2000s reduced emissions from the energy sector by 10 percent in 2009.
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