Table › Companies › Ministry of Electricity (Iraq)
🔥 Ministry of Electricity (Iraq) ranks #7 because its tracked power plants burn fossil fuels at scale.
Ministry of Electricity (Iraq), based in Iraq, generates electricity and heat, largely by burning fossil fuels. Climate TRACE attributes 35 high-emitting assets to it. Its largest tracked activities are electricity generation.
See the proof
Power plants & sites behind it35 attributed assets · ownership split equally across listed owners
| Asset | Sector | Ownership | Attributed | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Mussaib Thermal power plant | Power | 7.2 Mt | very low | |
| Baiji Thermal power station | Power | 6.5 Mt | very low | |
| Salahuddin power station | Power | 6.3 Mt | very low | |
| Shatt Al-Basra power station | Power | 6.2 Mt | very low | |
| Wasset power station | Power | 4.9 Mt | very low | |
| Al Dora power plant | Power | 4.6 Mt | very low | |
| Nasiriyah Thermal power station | Power | 4.6 Mt | very low | |
| Baghdad South 1 | Power | 4.2 Mt | very low | |
| Al Quds power station | Power | 4 Mt | very low | |
| Rumaila power station | Power | 3.5 Mt | very low | |
| Haydariya power station | Power | 3.3 Mt | very low | |
| Karbala Gas power plant | Power | 2.7 Mt | very low |
Who profits
Hand-curated shareholder, revenue and investor context from primary public sources. This data is shown alongside — but is not used to compute — the Climate Damage Score.
About this data. Institutional investors like BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street typically hold shares on behalf of clients — appearing in shareholder records does not mean they control or direct the company. State entities and individuals with majority stakes are different and labelled accordingly.
Revenue
Not publicly available in open sources yet.
Government ministry, not a commercial entity — no equity structure or audited financial statements published in open sources.
Emissions intensity
Cannot be computed without revenue. Not publicly available in open sources yet.
Top shareholders & investors
- Government of Iraq (sole authority)100%state
Source: primary public filings via Wikipedia. Stakes can change; see filings for the latest.
Government ministry, not a commercial entity — no equity structure or audited financial statements published in open sources.
How it's allowed
Signals below are derived from emissions data and ownership coverage only — not from any legal or regulatory finding.
Climate Villains makes no claim that any entity has broken any law. These are data-derived signals, not allegations.
Trend
Attributed emissions are rising by about +14.3% per year. Attributed emissions, 2022–2024.
It ranks #7 mainly because its attributed assets emitted about 84.4 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 18.4M cars/yr).
The Climate Damage Score is driven by that absolute size on a log scale, with a +1.3-point worsening adjustment.
Score breakdown
See the full methodology for how the score is built, or data & coverage for how complete the underlying numbers are.
What we know · what we don't
What we know
- Attributed emissions: 84.4 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 18.4M cars/yr).
- Primary sector: Power; primary country: Iraq.
- Evidence: 35 assets; ~100% ownership-attribution coverage.
- Source: Climate TRACE (CC BY 4.0).
What we don’t
- Exact ownership percentages — Climate TRACE lists owners but not stakes, so shared assets are split equally.
- Indirect (supply-chain / financed / product-use) emissions are not included.
- No PR claims, lobbying records, litigation history or policy-compliance data are included.