The production and use of crude oil-based materials, e.g., fossil fuels and bulk chemicals of organic origin, results in an increasing level of CO
2 emissions within the atmosphere. One way to reduce such CO
2 emissions is to substitute them with synthetic
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The production and use of crude oil-based materials, e.g., fossil fuels and bulk chemicals of organic origin, results in an increasing level of CO
2 emissions within the atmosphere. One way to reduce such CO
2 emissions is to substitute them with synthetic fuels and bulk chemicals. For the production of such CO
2 neutral materials, CO
2 from various sources can serve as a carbon source. Against this background, this paper analyses and quantifies CO
2 emissions released from German industry branches today (2017) and potentially in the future (2050) after a complete defossilization has been achieved. Thus, for the classification of CO
2 emissions from the respective industries in 2050, alternative techniques and manufacturing processes are analyzed that might lead to a reduction in energy- and process-related CO
2 emissions. Additionally, the individual production sites of the analyzed industries are determined at postcode level and a CO
2 potential on NUTS3 level has been developed. Based on this, two scenarios for future CO
2 emissions are developed. This shows that, in 2017, the analyzed German industrial sectors emitted almost 143 Mt CO
2. By 2050, the overall emissions can be decreased by about 77 Mt to 117 Mt CO
2 depending on the implementation level of alternative technologies.
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