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In 2024, the IEA is celebrating five decades as a leader in the global dialogue on energy. Discover the page, including an interactive timeline of fifty years of real-world solutions to help create a secure and sustainable energy future for all.
From policy ambition to real action, the IEA’s latest interactive database provides country and regional outlooks on climate commitments and net zero pledges. Dive in deeper to the explorer. Combining historical analysis with projections to 2030, the Global EV Outlook examines key areas of interest such as electric vehicle and charging ...
The IEA works with governments and industry to shape a secure and sustainable energy future for all. Our mission. 80% of global energy consumption. 62% of global energy production. 80% of global CO2 emissions. 87% of global clean energy investment. Member and association countries.
Explore and download the full data behind the Global EV Outlook. The Global EV Outlook is an annual publication that identifies and discusses recent developments in electric mobility across the globe. It is developed with the support of the members of the Electric Vehicles Initiative (EVI).
Search, filter, explore and download IEA analysis, reports and publications across all fuels and technologies.
Record prices, fuel shortages, rising poverty, slowing economies: the first energy crisis that's truly global. Energy markets began to tighten in 2021 because of a variety of factors, including the extraordinarily rapid economic rebound following the pandemic. But the situation escalated dramatically into a full-blown global energy crisis ...
Find global, regional, or country-level data on energy mix, emissions, electricity, efficiency and demand, renewables, oil, gas and coal. Explore world.
With the world in the midst of the first global energy crisis – triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine – the World Energy Outlook 2022 (WEO) provides indispensable analysis and insights on the implications of this profound and ongoing shock to energy systems across the globe.
The latest statistical data and real-time analysis confirm our initial estimates for 2020 energy demand and CO2 emissions while providing insights into how economic activity and energy use are rebounding in countries around the world – and what this means for global emissions.
In the IEA’s Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario, a pathway aligned with limiting global warming to 1.5 °C, electricity’s share in final energy consumption nears 30% in 2030. Electricity consumption from data centres, artificial intelligence (AI) and the cryptocurrency sector could double by 2026.