| Yearbook Statistical Energy Review 2010

Ranking

Glossary

Consumption (or domestic supply) is the balance of production and external trade. They are included at the world level. It is mainly divided between power plants, industry, transport and the residential and tertiary sectors, one part is used or lost in the energy transformation.

Electricity corresponds to the electricity produced and transported for commercial purposes, used by ad-hoc devices.

Sources
International sources
  • APEC
  • Asian Development Bank
  • Cedigaz
  • EURELECTRIC (Unipede)
  • Euracoal
  • Eurogas
  • Eurostat - Europa
  • IEA
  • OAPEC
  • OLADE
  • OPEC
  • UCTE
  • UN-ECE gas center
  • World Coal Institute
National sources
Periodicals
  • BIP, Bulletin de l'industrie pétrolière
  • DOE EIA, International
  • CEDIGAZ, News report
  • DOE/EIA, Monthly Energy Review
  • EDMC, Energy Trend
  • ENERPRESSE
  • IEA, Energy balances of OECD countries
  • IEA, Monthly Oil Market Report
  • IEA, Oil, Gas, Coal & Electricity Quarterly Statistics
  • KEI, Korea Energy Review Monthly
  • Missions Economiques, Fiches de synthèse
  • Petroleum Economist
How to use
  • Browse in the selection tree in the left column
  • Select a data serie by clicking
  • The map and graph are displayed
  • Click on a world region to view country detail
  • Pass the cursor over a country / zone to view 2009 data
  • Export data to Excel by clicking on the appropriate button
  • A country ranking is displayed for each data serie selected (left column)
  • A glossary and data sources are also available
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Current yearbook

Variation of electricity domestic consumption



At the world level, electricity consumption was cut down by 1.5% during 2009, for the first time since World War II

. Except in

Asia and Middle East, consumptions reduced in all the world regions

. In OECD countries, accounting for 53% of the total,

electricity demand scaled down by more than 4.5 %

in both Europe and North America while it shrank by above 7% in Japan. Electricity demand also dropped by more than 4.5% in CIS countries, driven by a large cut in Russian consumption. Conversely, in China and India (22% of the world's consumption), electricity consumption continued to rise at a strong pace (+6-7%) to meet energy needs related to high economic growth. In Middle East, growth rate was softened but remained high, just below 4%.
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