This very much varies depending on where you are in Europe and who you are talking to. Much of Western Europe gets a climate that is warmer than the same latitude in the US because of the Gulf Stream. It's possible that climate change might disrupt that resulting in certain regions being _colder_.
In the meantime, the latitudes at which you can economically grow wine grapes are gradually moving northwards.
- Microstates/islands which have very inefficient generation
- and then Estonia is worse than the US, because it still has lots of Soviet-era coal generation.
Most of Europe has per-capita emissions about half those of the US, comparable to those of China. The US has bad emissions because of cheap petrol and over 200GW of coal fired power stations.
In the meantime, the latitudes at which you can economically grow wine grapes are gradually moving northwards.
If you sort https://www.worldometers.info/co2-emissions/co2-emissions-pe... by per capita, you see that the biggest emitters are:
- Gulf states which run on oil
- Microstates/islands which have very inefficient generation
- and then Estonia is worse than the US, because it still has lots of Soviet-era coal generation.
Most of Europe has per-capita emissions about half those of the US, comparable to those of China. The US has bad emissions because of cheap petrol and over 200GW of coal fired power stations.