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Electric energy consumption

Electric energy consumption is energy consumption in the form of electrical energy.[2] About a fifth of global energy is consumed as electricity: for residential, industrial, commercial, transportation and other purposes.[2] Quickly increasing this share by further electrification is extremely important to limit climate change,[3] because most other energy is consumed by burning fossil fuels thus emitting greenhouse gases which trap heat.[4]

Electricity consumption by region. By 2025, Asia is projected to account for half of the world’s electricity consumption, with one-third of global electricity to be consumed in China.[1]

The global electricity consumption in 2022 was 24,398 terawatt-hour (TWh), almost exactly three times the amount of consumption in 1981 (8,132 TWh).[5] China, the United States, India and Japan accounted for more than half of the global share of electricity consumption.[5]

Overview edit

Electric energy is most often measured either in joules (J), or in watt hours (W·h).[6]

1 W·s = 1 J
1 W·h = 3,600 W·s = 3,600 J
1 kWh = 3,600 kWs = 1,000 Wh = 3.6 million W·s = 3.6 million J

Electric and electronic devices consume electric energy to generate desired output (light, heat, motion, etc.). During operation, some part of the energy is lost depending on the electrical efficiency.[7]

Electricity has been generated in power stations since 1882.[8] The invention of the steam turbine in 1884 to drive the electric generator led to an increase in worldwide electricity consumption.[9]

In 2022, the total worldwide electricity production was nearly 29,000 TWh.[10] Total primary energy is converted into numerous forms, including, but not limited to, electricity, heat and motion.[11] Some primary energy is lost during the conversion to electricity, as seen in the United States, where a little more than 60% was lost in 2022.[11]

Electricity accounted for more than 20% of worldwide final energy consumption in 2022, with oil being less than 40%, coal being less than 9%, natural gas being less than 15%, biofuels and waste less than 10%, and other sources (such as heat, solar electricity, wind electricity and geothermal) being more than 5%.[12] The total final electricity consumption in 2022 was split unevenly between the following sectors: industry (42.2%), residential (26.8%), commercial and public services (21.1%), transport (1.8%), and other (8.1%; i.e., agriculture and fishing).[12] In 1981, the final electricity consumption continued to decrease in the industrial sector and increase in the residential, commercial and public services sectors.[12]

A sensitivity analysis on an adaptive neuro-fuzzy network model for electric demand estimation shows that employment is the most critical factor influencing electrical consumption.[13] The study used six parameters as input data, employment, GDP, dwelling, population, heating degree day and cooling degree day, with electricity demand as output variable.[13]

World electricity consumption edit

The table lists 45 electricity-consuming countries, which used about 22,000 TWh. These countries comprise about 90% of the final consumption of 190+ countries. The final consumption to generate this electricity is provided for every country. The data is from 2022.[10][14]

In 2022, OECD's final electricity consumption was over 10,000 TWh.[5] In that year, the industrial sector consumed about 42.2% of the electricity, with the residential sector consuming nearly 26.8%, the commercial and public services sectors consuming about 21.1%, the transport sector consuming nearly 1.8%, and the other sectors (such as agriculture and fishing) consuming nearly 8.1%.[12] In recent decades, the consumption in the residential and commercial and public services sectors has grown, while the industry consumption has declined.[5] More recently, the transport sector has witnessed an increase in consumption with the growth in the electric vehicle market.[5]

Rank Data 2022 Country Final consumption
(TWh)
Population
(millions)
Per capita consumption
(MWh)
WORLD 24,398 7,960 3.07
1   China 7,214 1,443 5
2   United States 4,272 336 12.71
3   India 1,403 1,401 1
4   Japan 1,132 126 8.98
5   Russia 934 146 6.4
6   Canada 595 38.1 15.62
7   South Korea 553 51.2 10.8
8   Brazil 550 215 2.56
9   Germany 539 82.2 6.55
10   France 463 67.7 6.84
11   Saudi Arabia 317 36 8.81
12   United Kingdom 312 68.4 4.56
13   Indonesia 308 276 1.17
14   Italy 300 60 5
15   Mexico 296 127 2.33
16   Iran 280 83.3 3.36
17   Turkey 264 84 3.14
18   Taiwan 257 23.8[15] 10.8
19   Spain 246 46.8 5.26
20   South Africa 233 60 3.88
21   Australia 225 26 8.65
22   Vietnam 220 100 2.2
23   Thailand 203 70 2.9
24   Malaysia 170 33.2 5.12
25   Egypt 168 105 1.6
26   Poland 156 37.5 4.17
27   Ukraine 154 43.2 3.56
28   Sweden 147 10.2 14.4
29   Argentina 138 46 3
30   United Arab Emirates 136 10.2 13.33
31   Norway 128 5.5 23.27
32   Pakistan 124 226 0.55
33   Netherlands 120 17.5 6.86
34   Belgium 98 11.8 8.33
35   Finland 90 5.6 16.03
36   Chile 84 19.2 4.38
37   Kazakhstan 75 18.7 4
38   Austria 73 9.1 8.02
39   Venezuela 72 28.1 2.56
40   Algeria 66 44 1.5
41    Switzerland 62 9.3 6.67
42   Israel 59 9.4 6.27
43   New Zealand 43 5 8.6
44   Denmark 35 5.8 6.02
45   Ireland 28 5.5 5.1

Consumption per capita edit

The final consumption divided by the number of inhabitants provides a country's consumption per capita. In Western Europe, this is between 4 and 8 MWh/year.[10] (1 MWh = 1,000 kWh) In Scandinavia, the United States, Canada, Taiwan, South Korea, Australia, Japan and the United Kingdom, the per capita consumption is higher; however, in developing countries, it is much lower.[10] The world's average was about 3 MWh/year in 2022.[10] Very low consumption levels, such as those in Philippines, not included in the table, indicate that many inhabitants are not connected to the electricity grid, and that is the reason why some of the world's most populous countries, incl. Nigeria and Bangladesh, do not appear in the table.[14]

Electricity generation and GDP edit

The table lists 30 countries, which represent about 76% of the world population, 84% of the world GDP, and 85% of the world electricity generation.[10][14][16][17] Productivity per electricity generation (concept similar to energy intensity) can be measured by dividing GDP over the electricity generated. The data is from 2019.[10][14][16][17]

Electricity Generation (2019) and GDP (PPP) (2019)
Country Population,
millions
rank* GDP (PPP),
billions (USD)
rank* GDP (PPP)
per capita
rank* Electricity
generation
(GWh/yr)
rank* GDP (PPP)
/kWh*
  China 1,407 1 $14,280 2 $10,149 15 7,503,428 1 $1.9
  India 1,366 2 $2,871 6 $2,102 26 1,603,675 3 $1.8
  USA 328 3 $21,433 1 $65,345 1 4,411,159 2 $4.9
  Indonesia 270.6 4 $1,119 16 $4,135 20 278,942 17 $4.0
  Brazil 211 6 $1,878 9 $8,900 18 626,328 7 $3.0
  Pakistan 216.6 5 $279 26 $1,288 28 138,626 24 $2.0
  Bangladesh 163 8 $302 25 $1,853 27 89,672 27 $3.4
  Nigeria 201 7 $448 22 $2,229 25 33,552[18] 28 $13.4
  Russia 144 9 $1,687 11 $11,715 14 1,118,143 4 $1.5
  Japan 126 11 $5,149 3 $40,865 7 1,030,286 5 $5.0
  Mexico 127.6 10 $1,269 15 $9,945 16 322,584 13 $3.9
  Philippines 108 13 $377 23 $3,491 21 106,041 26 $3.6
  Vietnam 96.5 15 $262 27 $2,715 24 227,461 21 $1.2
  Ethiopia 112 12 $96 29 $857 29 14,553[19] 29 $6.6
  Egypt 100.4 14 $303 24 $3,018 23 200,563 22 $1.5
  Germany 83 18 $3,888 4 $46,843 4 609,406 8 $6.4
  Turkey 83.5 17 $761 19 $9,114 17 303,898 15 $2.5
  DR Congo 86.8 16 $50 30 $576 30 9,990[20] 30 $5.0
  Iran 83 19 $258 28 $3,108 22 318,696 14 $0.8
  Thailand 69.6 20 $544 21 $7,816 19 186,503 23 $2.9
  France 67.3 21 $2,729 7 $40,550 8 562,842 10 $4.8
  UK 66.8 22 $2,879 5 $43,099 6 324,761 12 $8.9
  Italy 59.7 23 $2,009 8 $33,652 9 293,853 16 $6.8
  South Korea 51.7 24 $1,651 12 $31,934 10 585,301 9 $2.8
  Spain 47.1 25 $1,393 13 $29,575 11 267,501 19 $5.2
  Canada 37.6 26 $1,742 10 $46,330 5 648,676 6 $2.7
  Saudi Arabia 34.3 27 $793 18 $23,120 13 343,661 11 $2.3
  Taiwan 23.6[15] 28 $605[21] 20 $25,636 12 274,059 18 $2.2
  Australia 25.4 29 $1,392 14 $54,803 2 265,901 20 $5.2
  Netherlands 17.3 30 $910 17 $52,601 3 121,062 25 $7.5
World 7,683 $87,555 $11,395 27,044,191 $3.5
  • Population data is from the World Bank[14]
  • GDP data is from the World Bank[16]
  • Electricity data is from BP Global[17]
  • rank* of Population, GDP, and Electricity generation are rankings within this list
  • GDP (PPP) / kWh is the amount of GDP (PPP) (USD) produced per kilowatt-hour

Electricity consumption by sector edit

The table below lists the 15 countries with the highest final electricity consumption, which comprised more than 70% of the global consumption in 2022.[10]

Electricity Final Consumption by Sector (2022)
Country/ Geographical Region Total
(TWh)
Industry Transport Commercial
/Public
Services
Residential Agriculture

/Forestry

other
  China 7,214 59.9% 2.4% 7.3% 16.4% 2.2% 11.8%
  United States 4,272 19.9% 0.6% 35.2% 37.4% 2.1% 4.8%
  India 1,403 37.7% 11.2% 7.8% 21.7% 15.9% 5.7%
  Japan 1,132 37% 1.8% 33.7% 27.1% 0.3% 0.1%
  Russia 934 44.8% 11.1% 20.4% 21.1% 2.5% 0.1%
  Canada 595 35.9% 1.5% 28.1% 32.5% 2.0% 0%
  South Korea 553 52.3% 0.6% 31.4% 12.7% 2.5% 0.5%
  Brazil 550 38.3% 0.7% 27.3% 27.7% 6% 0%
  Germany 539 44.8% 2.3% 26.4% 25.4% 1.1% 0%
  France 463 26.9% 2.4% 31.5% 37% 1.9% 0.3%
  Saudi Arabia 317 33.7% 3.9% 28.3% 25% 4.1% 5%
  United Kingdom 312 18.3% 2.2% 38.2% 39.1% 2% 0.2%
  Italy 300 30% 5% 32% 30% 1% 2%
  Mexico 296 29% 4% 33% 30% 3% 1%
  Iran 280 24% 6% 37% 25% 5% 3%
World 24,398 42.2% 1.8% 21.1% 26.8% 3.1% 5%

Electricity outlook edit

Looking forward, increasing energy efficiency will result in less electricity needed for a given demand in power, but demand will increase strongly on the account of:[22]

  • Economic growth in developing countries,[22] and
  • Electrification of transport and heating. Combustion engines are replaced by electric drive and for heating less gas and oil, but more electricity is used, if possible with heat pumps.[22]

As transport and heating become more climate-friendly, the environmental effect of energy consumption will be more determined by electricity.[22]

The International Energy Agency expects revisions of subsidies for fossil fuels which amounted to $550 billion in 2013, more than four times renewable energy subsidies. In this scenario,[23] almost half of the increase in 2040 of electricity consumption is covered by more than 80% growth of renewable energy. Many new nuclear plants will be constructed, mainly to replace old ones. The nuclear part of electricity generation will increase from 11 to 12%. The renewable part goes up much more, from 21 to 33%. The IEA warns that in order to restrict global warming to 2 °C, carbon dioxide emissions[24] must not exceed 1000 gigaton (Gt) from 2014. This limit is reached in 2040 and emissions will not drop to zero ever.

The World Energy Council[25] sees world electricity consumption increasing to more than 40,000 TWh/a in 2040. The fossil part of generation depends on energy policy. It can stay around 70% in the so-called Jazz scenario where countries rather independently "improvise" but it can also decrease to around 40% in the Symphony scenario if countries work "orchestrated" for more climate friendly policy. Carbon dioxide emissions, 32 Gt/a in 2012, will increase to 46 Gt/a in Jazz but decrease to 26 Gt/a in Symphony. Accordingly, until 2040 the renewable part of generation will stay at about 20% in Jazz but increase to about 45% in Symphony.

An EU survey conducted on climate and energy consumption in 2022 found that 63% of people in the European Union want energy costs to be dependent on use, with the greatest consumers paying more. This is compared to 83% in China, 63% in the UK and 57% in the US.[26][27] 24% of Americans surveyed believing that people and businesses should do more to cut their own usage (compared to 20% in the UK, 19% in the EU, and 17% in China).[28][29]

Nearly half of those polled in the European Union (47%) and the United Kingdom (45%) want their government to focus on the development of renewable energies. This is compared to 37% in both the United States and China when asked to list their priorities on energy.[28][30][31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Electricity Market Report 2023" (PDF). IEA.org. International Energy Agency. February 2023. p. 15. (PDF) from the original on 15 March 2023. Licensed CC BY 4.0.
  2. ^ a b "Electricity explained: Use of electricity - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)". www.eia.gov. from the original on 2019-09-16. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  3. ^ "Electrification – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
  4. ^ Ritchie, Hannah; Roser, Max; Rosado, Pablo (2022-10-27). "Energy". Our World in Data.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Electricity consumption – Electricity Information: Overview – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  6. ^ "Energy Units". www.aps.org. Retrieved 2022-01-23.
  7. ^ "Electricity – Sustainable Recovery – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2022-02-10.
  8. ^ "Electricity Generation". Institute for Energy Research. Institute for Energy Research. 2 September 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  9. ^ "Catalog of CHP Technologies: Section 4. Technology Characterization – Steam Turbines" (PDF). www.epa.gov. March 2015. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h . IEA. Archived from the original on 2022-01-19. Retrieved 2022-01-25.
  11. ^ a b "More than 60% of energy used for electricity generation is lost in conversion - Today in Energy - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)". www.eia.gov. Retrieved 2022-02-10.
  12. ^ a b c d "Key World Energy Statistics 2021 – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  13. ^ a b Zahedi, Gholamreza; Azizi, Saeed; Bahadori, Alireza; Elkamel, Ali; R. Wan Alwi, Sharifah (2013). "Electricity demand estimation using an adaptive neuro-fuzzy network: A case study from the Ontario province – Canada". Energy. 49: 323–328. doi:10.1016/j.energy.2012.10.019.
  14. ^ a b c d e "Population, total | Data". data.worldbank.org. Retrieved 2022-01-25.
  15. ^ a b "National Statistics, Republic of China (Taiwan)". eng.stat.gov.tw. Retrieved 2022-01-25.
  16. ^ a b c "GDP (current US$) | Data". data.worldbank.org. Retrieved 2022-02-02.
  17. ^ a b c "Statistical Review of World Energy | Energy economics | Home". bp global. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  18. ^ "Energy Profile: Nigeria" (PDF). International Renewable Energy Agency. September 29, 2021. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  19. ^ "Energy Profile: Ethiopia". International Renewable Energy Agency. September 29, 2021. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  20. ^ "Energy Profile: Democratic Republic of the Congo" (PDF). International Renewable Energy Agency. September 29, 2021. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  21. ^ "National Statistics, Republic of China (Taiwan)". eng.stat.gov.tw. Retrieved 2022-02-02.
  22. ^ a b c d "World Energy Outlook 2021 – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2022-02-23.
  23. ^ IEA World energy outlook
  24. ^ by fossil fuel
  25. ^ World energy scenarios
  26. ^ "2022-2023 EIB Climate Survey, part 1 of 2: Majority of Europeans say the war in Ukraine and high energy prices should accelerate the green transition". EIB.org. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  27. ^ "Energy poverty". energy.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  28. ^ a b "2022-2023 EIB Climate Survey, part 1 of 2: Majority of Europeans say the war in Ukraine and high energy prices should accelerate the green transition". EIB.org. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  29. ^ "Energy efficiency directive". energy.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  30. ^ ""Fit for 55": Council agrees on higher targets for renewables and energy efficiency". www.consilium.europa.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  31. ^ "Share of energy consumption from renewable sources in Europe". www.eea.europa.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-17.

External links edit

  • World Electricity production 2012
  • World Map and Chart of Energy Consumption by country by Lebanese-economy-forum, World Bank data
  • Electricity Information 2019 - IEA

electric, energy, consumption, energy, consumption, form, electrical, energy, about, fifth, global, energy, consumed, electricity, residential, industrial, commercial, transportation, other, purposes, quickly, increasing, this, share, further, electrification,. Electric energy consumption is energy consumption in the form of electrical energy 2 About a fifth of global energy is consumed as electricity for residential industrial commercial transportation and other purposes 2 Quickly increasing this share by further electrification is extremely important to limit climate change 3 because most other energy is consumed by burning fossil fuels thus emitting greenhouse gases which trap heat 4 Electricity consumption by region By 2025 Asia is projected to account for half of the world s electricity consumption with one third of global electricity to be consumed in China 1 The global electricity consumption in 2022 was 24 398 terawatt hour TWh almost exactly three times the amount of consumption in 1981 8 132 TWh 5 China the United States India and Japan accounted for more than half of the global share of electricity consumption 5 Contents 1 Overview 2 World electricity consumption 2 1 Consumption per capita 3 Electricity generation and GDP 4 Electricity consumption by sector 5 Electricity outlook 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOverview editElectric energy is most often measured either in joules J or in watt hours W h 6 1 W s 1 J 1 W h 3 600 W s 3 600 J 1 kWh 3 600 kWs 1 000 Wh 3 6 million W s 3 6 million JElectric and electronic devices consume electric energy to generate desired output light heat motion etc During operation some part of the energy is lost depending on the electrical efficiency 7 Electricity has been generated in power stations since 1882 8 The invention of the steam turbine in 1884 to drive the electric generator led to an increase in worldwide electricity consumption 9 In 2022 the total worldwide electricity production was nearly 29 000 TWh 10 Total primary energy is converted into numerous forms including but not limited to electricity heat and motion 11 Some primary energy is lost during the conversion to electricity as seen in the United States where a little more than 60 was lost in 2022 11 Electricity accounted for more than 20 of worldwide final energy consumption in 2022 with oil being less than 40 coal being less than 9 natural gas being less than 15 biofuels and waste less than 10 and other sources such as heat solar electricity wind electricity and geothermal being more than 5 12 The total final electricity consumption in 2022 was split unevenly between the following sectors industry 42 2 residential 26 8 commercial and public services 21 1 transport 1 8 and other 8 1 i e agriculture and fishing 12 In 1981 the final electricity consumption continued to decrease in the industrial sector and increase in the residential commercial and public services sectors 12 A sensitivity analysis on an adaptive neuro fuzzy network model for electric demand estimation shows that employment is the most critical factor influencing electrical consumption 13 The study used six parameters as input data employment GDP dwelling population heating degree day and cooling degree day with electricity demand as output variable 13 World electricity consumption editSee also List of countries by electricity consumption The table lists 45 electricity consuming countries which used about 22 000 TWh These countries comprise about 90 of the final consumption of 190 countries The final consumption to generate this electricity is provided for every country The data is from 2022 10 14 In 2022 OECD s final electricity consumption was over 10 000 TWh 5 In that year the industrial sector consumed about 42 2 of the electricity with the residential sector consuming nearly 26 8 the commercial and public services sectors consuming about 21 1 the transport sector consuming nearly 1 8 and the other sectors such as agriculture and fishing consuming nearly 8 1 12 In recent decades the consumption in the residential and commercial and public services sectors has grown while the industry consumption has declined 5 More recently the transport sector has witnessed an increase in consumption with the growth in the electric vehicle market 5 Rank Data 2022 Country Final consumption TWh Population millions Per capita consumption MWh WORLD 24 398 7 960 3 071 nbsp China 7 214 1 443 52 nbsp United States 4 272 336 12 713 nbsp India 1 403 1 401 14 nbsp Japan 1 132 126 8 985 nbsp Russia 934 146 6 46 nbsp Canada 595 38 1 15 627 nbsp South Korea 553 51 2 10 88 nbsp Brazil 550 215 2 569 nbsp Germany 539 82 2 6 5510 nbsp France 463 67 7 6 8411 nbsp Saudi Arabia 317 36 8 8112 nbsp United Kingdom 312 68 4 4 5613 nbsp Indonesia 308 276 1 1714 nbsp Italy 300 60 515 nbsp Mexico 296 127 2 3316 nbsp Iran 280 83 3 3 3617 nbsp Turkey 264 84 3 1418 nbsp Taiwan 257 23 8 15 10 819 nbsp Spain 246 46 8 5 2620 nbsp South Africa 233 60 3 8821 nbsp Australia 225 26 8 6522 nbsp Vietnam 220 100 2 223 nbsp Thailand 203 70 2 924 nbsp Malaysia 170 33 2 5 1225 nbsp Egypt 168 105 1 626 nbsp Poland 156 37 5 4 1727 nbsp Ukraine 154 43 2 3 5628 nbsp Sweden 147 10 2 14 429 nbsp Argentina 138 46 330 nbsp United Arab Emirates 136 10 2 13 3331 nbsp Norway 128 5 5 23 2732 nbsp Pakistan 124 226 0 5533 nbsp Netherlands 120 17 5 6 8634 nbsp Belgium 98 11 8 8 3335 nbsp Finland 90 5 6 16 0336 nbsp Chile 84 19 2 4 3837 nbsp Kazakhstan 75 18 7 438 nbsp Austria 73 9 1 8 0239 nbsp Venezuela 72 28 1 2 5640 nbsp Algeria 66 44 1 541 nbsp Switzerland 62 9 3 6 6742 nbsp Israel 59 9 4 6 2743 nbsp New Zealand 43 5 8 644 nbsp Denmark 35 5 8 6 0245 nbsp Ireland 28 5 5 5 1Consumption per capita edit The final consumption divided by the number of inhabitants provides a country s consumption per capita In Western Europe this is between 4 and 8 MWh year 10 1 MWh 1 000 kWh In Scandinavia the United States Canada Taiwan South Korea Australia Japan and the United Kingdom the per capita consumption is higher however in developing countries it is much lower 10 The world s average was about 3 MWh year in 2022 10 Very low consumption levels such as those in Philippines not included in the table indicate that many inhabitants are not connected to the electricity grid and that is the reason why some of the world s most populous countries incl Nigeria and Bangladesh do not appear in the table 14 Electricity generation and GDP editThe table lists 30 countries which represent about 76 of the world population 84 of the world GDP and 85 of the world electricity generation 10 14 16 17 Productivity per electricity generation concept similar to energy intensity can be measured by dividing GDP over the electricity generated The data is from 2019 10 14 16 17 Electricity Generation 2019 and GDP PPP 2019 Country Population millions rank GDP PPP billions USD rank GDP PPP per capita rank Electricity generation GWh yr rank GDP PPP kWh nbsp China 1 407 1 14 280 2 10 149 15 7 503 428 1 1 9 nbsp India 1 366 2 2 871 6 2 102 26 1 603 675 3 1 8 nbsp USA 328 3 21 433 1 65 345 1 4 411 159 2 4 9 nbsp Indonesia 270 6 4 1 119 16 4 135 20 278 942 17 4 0 nbsp Brazil 211 6 1 878 9 8 900 18 626 328 7 3 0 nbsp Pakistan 216 6 5 279 26 1 288 28 138 626 24 2 0 nbsp Bangladesh 163 8 302 25 1 853 27 89 672 27 3 4 nbsp Nigeria 201 7 448 22 2 229 25 33 552 18 28 13 4 nbsp Russia 144 9 1 687 11 11 715 14 1 118 143 4 1 5 nbsp Japan 126 11 5 149 3 40 865 7 1 030 286 5 5 0 nbsp Mexico 127 6 10 1 269 15 9 945 16 322 584 13 3 9 nbsp Philippines 108 13 377 23 3 491 21 106 041 26 3 6 nbsp Vietnam 96 5 15 262 27 2 715 24 227 461 21 1 2 nbsp Ethiopia 112 12 96 29 857 29 14 553 19 29 6 6 nbsp Egypt 100 4 14 303 24 3 018 23 200 563 22 1 5 nbsp Germany 83 18 3 888 4 46 843 4 609 406 8 6 4 nbsp Turkey 83 5 17 761 19 9 114 17 303 898 15 2 5 nbsp DR Congo 86 8 16 50 30 576 30 9 990 20 30 5 0 nbsp Iran 83 19 258 28 3 108 22 318 696 14 0 8 nbsp Thailand 69 6 20 544 21 7 816 19 186 503 23 2 9 nbsp France 67 3 21 2 729 7 40 550 8 562 842 10 4 8 nbsp UK 66 8 22 2 879 5 43 099 6 324 761 12 8 9 nbsp Italy 59 7 23 2 009 8 33 652 9 293 853 16 6 8 nbsp South Korea 51 7 24 1 651 12 31 934 10 585 301 9 2 8 nbsp Spain 47 1 25 1 393 13 29 575 11 267 501 19 5 2 nbsp Canada 37 6 26 1 742 10 46 330 5 648 676 6 2 7 nbsp Saudi Arabia 34 3 27 793 18 23 120 13 343 661 11 2 3 nbsp Taiwan 23 6 15 28 605 21 20 25 636 12 274 059 18 2 2 nbsp Australia 25 4 29 1 392 14 54 803 2 265 901 20 5 2 nbsp Netherlands 17 3 30 910 17 52 601 3 121 062 25 7 5World 7 683 87 555 11 395 27 044 191 3 5Population data is from the World Bank 14 GDP data is from the World Bank 16 Electricity data is from BP Global 17 rank of Population GDP and Electricity generation are rankings within this list GDP PPP kWh is the amount of GDP PPP USD produced per kilowatt hourElectricity consumption by sector editThe table below lists the 15 countries with the highest final electricity consumption which comprised more than 70 of the global consumption in 2022 10 Electricity Final Consumption by Sector 2022 Country Geographical Region Total TWh Industry Transport Commercial Public Services Residential Agriculture Forestry other nbsp China 7 214 59 9 2 4 7 3 16 4 2 2 11 8 nbsp United States 4 272 19 9 0 6 35 2 37 4 2 1 4 8 nbsp India 1 403 37 7 11 2 7 8 21 7 15 9 5 7 nbsp Japan 1 132 37 1 8 33 7 27 1 0 3 0 1 nbsp Russia 934 44 8 11 1 20 4 21 1 2 5 0 1 nbsp Canada 595 35 9 1 5 28 1 32 5 2 0 0 nbsp South Korea 553 52 3 0 6 31 4 12 7 2 5 0 5 nbsp Brazil 550 38 3 0 7 27 3 27 7 6 0 nbsp Germany 539 44 8 2 3 26 4 25 4 1 1 0 nbsp France 463 26 9 2 4 31 5 37 1 9 0 3 nbsp Saudi Arabia 317 33 7 3 9 28 3 25 4 1 5 nbsp United Kingdom 312 18 3 2 2 38 2 39 1 2 0 2 nbsp Italy 300 30 5 32 30 1 2 nbsp Mexico 296 29 4 33 30 3 1 nbsp Iran 280 24 6 37 25 5 3 World 24 398 42 2 1 8 21 1 26 8 3 1 5 Electricity outlook editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2022 Looking forward increasing energy efficiency will result in less electricity needed for a given demand in power but demand will increase strongly on the account of 22 Economic growth in developing countries 22 and Electrification of transport and heating Combustion engines are replaced by electric drive and for heating less gas and oil but more electricity is used if possible with heat pumps 22 As transport and heating become more climate friendly the environmental effect of energy consumption will be more determined by electricity 22 The International Energy Agency expects revisions of subsidies for fossil fuels which amounted to 550 billion in 2013 more than four times renewable energy subsidies In this scenario 23 almost half of the increase in 2040 of electricity consumption is covered by more than 80 growth of renewable energy Many new nuclear plants will be constructed mainly to replace old ones The nuclear part of electricity generation will increase from 11 to 12 The renewable part goes up much more from 21 to 33 The IEA warns that in order to restrict global warming to 2 C carbon dioxide emissions 24 must not exceed 1000 gigaton Gt from 2014 This limit is reached in 2040 and emissions will not drop to zero ever The World Energy Council 25 sees world electricity consumption increasing to more than 40 000 TWh a in 2040 The fossil part of generation depends on energy policy It can stay around 70 in the so called Jazz scenario where countries rather independently improvise but it can also decrease to around 40 in the Symphony scenario if countries work orchestrated for more climate friendly policy Carbon dioxide emissions 32 Gt a in 2012 will increase to 46 Gt a in Jazz but decrease to 26 Gt a in Symphony Accordingly until 2040 the renewable part of generation will stay at about 20 in Jazz but increase to about 45 in Symphony An EU survey conducted on climate and energy consumption in 2022 found that 63 of people in the European Union want energy costs to be dependent on use with the greatest consumers paying more This is compared to 83 in China 63 in the UK and 57 in the US 26 27 24 of Americans surveyed believing that people and businesses should do more to cut their own usage compared to 20 in the UK 19 in the EU and 17 in China 28 29 Nearly half of those polled in the European Union 47 and the United Kingdom 45 want their government to focus on the development of renewable energies This is compared to 37 in both the United States and China when asked to list their priorities on energy 28 30 31 See also editElectricity generation Electricity retailing Energy intensity by country List of countries by carbon dioxide emissions List of countries by electricity consumption List of countries by electricity production List of countries by energy consumption per capita List of countries by greenhouse gas emissions List of countries by renewable electricity production List of countries by total primary energy consumption and production World energy supply and consumptionReferences edit Electricity Market Report 2023 PDF IEA org International Energy Agency February 2023 p 15 Archived PDF from the original on 15 March 2023 Licensed CC BY 4 0 a b Electricity explained Use of electricity U S Energy Information Administration EIA www eia gov Archived from the original on 2019 09 16 Retrieved 2022 01 22 Electrification Analysis IEA Retrieved 2023 04 11 Ritchie Hannah Roser Max Rosado Pablo 2022 10 27 Energy Our World in Data a b c d e Electricity consumption Electricity Information Overview Analysis IEA Retrieved 2022 01 22 Energy Units www aps org Retrieved 2022 01 23 Electricity Sustainable Recovery Analysis IEA Retrieved 2022 02 10 Electricity Generation Institute for Energy Research Institute for Energy Research 2 September 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2015 Catalog of CHP Technologies Section 4 Technology Characterization Steam Turbines PDF www epa gov March 2015 Retrieved January 23 2022 a b c d e f g h Data tables Data amp Statistics IEA Archived from the original on 2022 01 19 Retrieved 2022 01 25 a b More than 60 of energy used for electricity generation is lost in conversion Today in Energy U S Energy Information Administration EIA www eia gov Retrieved 2022 02 10 a b c d Key World Energy Statistics 2021 Analysis IEA Retrieved 2022 02 16 a b Zahedi Gholamreza Azizi Saeed Bahadori Alireza Elkamel Ali R Wan Alwi Sharifah 2013 Electricity demand estimation using an adaptive neuro fuzzy network A case study from the Ontario province Canada Energy 49 323 328 doi 10 1016 j energy 2012 10 019 a b c d e Population total Data data worldbank org Retrieved 2022 01 25 a b National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan eng stat gov tw Retrieved 2022 01 25 a b c GDP current US Data data worldbank org Retrieved 2022 02 02 a b c Statistical Review of World Energy Energy economics Home bp global Retrieved 2022 02 03 Energy Profile Nigeria PDF International Renewable Energy Agency September 29 2021 Retrieved February 2 2022 Energy Profile Ethiopia International Renewable Energy Agency September 29 2021 Retrieved February 2 2022 Energy Profile Democratic Republic of the Congo PDF International Renewable Energy Agency September 29 2021 Retrieved February 2 2022 National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan eng stat gov tw Retrieved 2022 02 02 a b c d World Energy Outlook 2021 Analysis IEA Retrieved 2022 02 23 IEA World energy outlook by fossil fuel World energy scenarios 2022 2023 EIB Climate Survey part 1 of 2 Majority of Europeans say the war in Ukraine and high energy prices should accelerate the green transition EIB org Retrieved 2022 11 17 Energy poverty energy ec europa eu Retrieved 2022 11 17 a b 2022 2023 EIB Climate Survey part 1 of 2 Majority of Europeans say the war in Ukraine and high energy prices should accelerate the green transition EIB org Retrieved 2022 11 17 Energy efficiency directive energy ec europa eu Retrieved 2022 11 17 Fit for 55 Council agrees on higher targets for renewables and energy efficiency www consilium europa eu Retrieved 2022 11 17 Share of energy consumption from renewable sources in Europe www eea europa eu Retrieved 2022 11 17 External links editWorld Electricity production 2012 World Map and Chart of Energy Consumption by country by Lebanese economy forum World Bank data Electricity Information 2019 IEA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electric energy consumption amp oldid 1211354305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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