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In the IEO2021 Reference case, energy consumption continues to rise through 2050 in both OECD and non-OECD countries, largely as a result of increasing GDP and population. As standards of living increase, most notably in non-OECD Asian countries, demand for goods and the energy needed to manufacture those goods increase.
- Liquid Fuels Remain The Largest Energy Source in The Reference Case, But Renewable Energy Use Grows to Nearly The Same Level
In homes, electricity use grows faster than any other energy...
- Across All Cases, End-Use Sectors in non-OECD Countries Drive The Return of Global Energy Use to Pre-Pandemic Levels
Overall consumption of energy in buildings declined in 2020...
- In The Reference Case, Global Emissions Rise Throughout The Projection Period, Although Slowed by Regional Policies, Renewable Growth, and Increasing Energy Efficiency
Global energy-related carbon dioxide (CO 2) emissions rise...
- Electricity
Describes the data that EIA regularly collects and how the...
- Production
Production - International Energy Outlook Consumption - By...
- Introduction
Introduction - International Energy Outlook Consumption - By...
- EIA Revises Global Liquid Fuels Demand Growth Down Because of The Coronavirus
In the February 2020 update of its Short-Term Energy Outlook...
- EIA Estimates That Global Petroleum Liquids Consumption Dropped 9% in 2020
Responses to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) caused...
- Liquid Fuels Remain The Largest Energy Source in The Reference Case, But Renewable Energy Use Grows to Nearly The Same Level
3 lut 2021 · Annual Energy Outlook 2021. Release date: February 3, 2021 | Next release date: March 2022 | AEO Narrative
7 paź 2021 · We project that in non-OECD countries, electricity will account for more than half of the energy used in households by 2050, compared with 33% in 2020. In non-OECD commercial buildings, we project that electricity will make up an even larger share of energy consumption in 2050, at 64%.
Against the backdrop of turbulent markets and a crucial meeting of the COP26 conference on climate change in Glasgow, the 2021 World Energy Outlook (WEO) provides an indispensable guide to the opportunities, benefits and risks ahead at this vital moment for clean energy transitions.
The direction of travel is a long way from alignment with the IEA’s landmark Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario (NZE1), published in May 2021, which charts a narrow but achievable roadmap to a 1.5 °C stabilisation in rising global temperatures and the achievement of other energy-related sustainable development goals.
Overview. Key themes of WEO 2021. In the run-up to a crucial COP26 meeting in Glasgow, this World Energy Outlook-2021 (WEO-2021) provides a detailed picture of how far countries have come in their clean energy transitions, and how far they still have to go.
In the STEPS, global energy-related and industrial process CO 2 emissions rebound quickly in 2021 and rise to 36 gigatonnes (Gt) in 2030. In the APS, emissions peak in the mid-2020s and return to just under 34 Gt in 2030, close to current levels.