Geography
Tunisia
Recent documents
Tunisia Nationally Determined Contribution. NDC3.0
- UN Submission
- Tunisia
- 2025
Tunisia Biennial Transparency Report. BTR1
- UN Submission
- Tunisia
- 2024
Tunisia National Inventory Report (NIR). 2024
- UN Submission
- Tunisia
- 2024
Tunisia National Communication. NC4
- UN Submission
- Tunisia
- 2024
There are 19 documents in the database.
Targets 3
A 48% reduction in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in 2030.
Energy, Target year: 2030Source: National energy management strategyCumulated savings of 3 million tonnes of oil equivalent (Mtoe) by 2010, 30 Mtoe by 2020 and 80 Mtoe by 2030 by 2010, 2020, 2030 against a 2002 baseline
Energy, Target year: 2030Source: National Sustainable Development Strategy400,000 new hectares of forests and silvo-pastoral plantations by 2011
LULUCF, Target year: 2011Source: National Sustainable Development StrategyAbout this geography
Political groups
G77, The Arab Group
Global climate risk index
World Bank income group
Lower middle income
Share of global emissions
Legislative process
Tunisia is a representative democracy, a civil state, with an executive president, a legislature and judiciary. The Constitution’s preamble states a paragraph that illustrates the motives to set a new constitutional framework as follows: “With a view to building a republican, democratic and participatory system, in the framework of a civil state founded on the sovereignty of the people, exercised through the peaceful alternation of power through free elections, and on the principle of the separation and balance of powers, which guarantees the freedom of association in conformity with the principles of pluralism, an impartial administration, and good governance, which are the foundations of political competition, where the state guarantees the supremacy of the law and the respect for freedoms and human rights, the independence of the judiciary, the equality of rights and duties between all citizens, male and female, and equality between all regions […] We, in the name of the Tunisian people, with the help of God, draft this Constitution”. The country’s Constitution has supremacy over all other laws. Within Title Five, named ‘The Judicial Authority, Part two regulates the Constitutional Court — an independent judicial body, composed of 12 competent members, three-quarters of whom are legal experts with at least 20 years of experience (article 118) —. This Court’s competence includes overseeing constitutionality of draft laws and treaties, including cases referred to it by lower courts (article 120).
