The Energy Institute and co-authors KPMG and Kearney released the 73rd annual edition of the Statistical Review of World Energy, presenting the full global energy data picture for 2023.
The Energy Institute’s (EI) annual report is the definitive assessment for the previous year’s energy consumption patterns. Record highs were reached in both fossil fuel consumption and energy emissions in 2023 even as fossil fuel’s share of the global energy mix declined slightly.
The full report can be downloaded here.
EI’s media release on the report identifies five key stories from 2023:
- Record global energy consumption, with coal and oil pushing fossil fuels and their emissions to record levels
- Global primary energy consumption overall was at a record absolute high, up 2% on the previous year to 620 Exajoules (EJ).
- Global fossil fuel consumption reached a record high, up 1.5% to 505 EJ (driven by coal up 1.6%, oil up 2% to above 100 million barrels for first time, while gas was flat). As a share of the overall mix they were at 81.5%, marginally down from 82% last year.
- Emissions from energy increased by 2%, exceeding 40 gigatonnes of CO2 for the first time.
- Solar and wind push global renewable electricity generation to another record level
- Renewable generation, excluding hydro, was up 13% to a record high of 4,748 TWh
- This growth was driven almost entirely by wind and solar, and accounted for 74% of all net additional electricity generated.
- As a share of primary energy use, renewables (excluding hydro) were at 8%, or 15% including hydro.
- Ongoing Ukraine conflict cements gas rebalancing in Europe
- European gas demand fell by 7% following a fall of 13% the previous year.
- Russia’s share of EU gas imports fell to 15%, down from 45% in 2021, with LNG imports outflanking piped gas to Europe for a second year in a row.
- Dependence on fossil fuels in major advanced economies is likely to have peaked
- In Europe fossil fuels fell to below 70% of primary energy for the first time since the Industrial Revolution, driven by demand reduction and renewable energy growth.
- US consumption of fossil fuels fell to 80% of total primary energy consumed.
- Growth economies struggle to curb fossil fuel growth, but renewables accelerate in China
- In India fossil fuel consumption was up 8%, accounting for almost all demand growth, and stood at 89% share of overall consumption. For the first time, more coal was used in India than Europe and North America combined.
- In Africa primary energy consumption fell in 2023 by 0.5%. Fossil fuels accounted for 90% of overall energy consumption, with renewables (excluding hydro) at only 6% of electricity.
- China’s full return post-Covid saw fossil fuel use increase to a new high, up 6%, but as a share of primary energy it has been in decline since 2011, down to 81.6% in 2023. China added 55% of all renewable generation additions in 2023, i.e. more than the rest of the world combined. It also overtook Europe on an energy per capita basis for the first time.
EI Chief Executive Nick Wayth, commented that, “…progress of the transition is slow, but the big picture masks diverse energy stories playing out across different geographies. In advanced economies we observe signs of demand for fossil fuels peaking, contrasting with economies in the Global South for whom economic development and improvements in quality of life continue to drive fossil growth.”