Catalysis Database

Global Energy Review 2025

Not known, not knoown (2025) Global Energy Review 2025. Project Report. INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY.

[img] PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
808kB

Abstract

from the web nothing original This edition of the Global Energy Review is the first comprehensive depiction of the trends that took place in 2024 across the entire energy sector, covering data for all fuels and technologies, all regions and major countries, and energy-related carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. The latest data show that the world’s appetite for energy rose at a faster-thanaverage pace in 2024, resulting in higher demand for all energy sources, including oil, natural gas, coal, renewables and nuclear power. This growth was led by the power sector, with demand for electricity rising almost twice as fast as wider energy demand due to higher demand for cooling, rising consumption by industry, the electrification of transport and the growth of data centres and artificial intelligence. Nearly all of the rise in electricity demand was met by low-emissions sources, led by the record-breaking expansion of solar PV capacity, with further growth in other renewables and nuclear power. Gas demand also picked up substantially, while oil and coal consumption increased more slowly than in 2023. CO2 emissions from the energy sector continued to increase in 2024 but at a slower rate than in 2023. A key driver was record-high temperatures: if global weather patterns in 2023 had repeated in 2024, around half of the increase in global emissions would have been avoided. At the same time, the continued rapid adoption of clean energy technologies is limiting emissions growth, according to new analysis – avoiding 2.6 billion tonnes of additional CO2 emissions per year

Item Type:Monograph (Project Report)
Subjects:Energy Science
Energy Science > QD Chemistry
ID Code:4412
Deposited By: Professor Balasubramanian Viswanathan
Deposited On:24 Mar 2025 09:02
Last Modified:24 Mar 2025 09:02

Repository Staff Only: item control page