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Electric energy consumption

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Electric energy consumption


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2015 World electricity generation by fuels (IEA, 2017)[1]



  Coal/Peat (39.3%)


  Natural Gas (22.9%)


  Hydro (16.0%)


  Nuclear (10.6%)


  Oil (4.1%)


  Others (Renew.) (7.1%)



Electric energy consumption is the form of energy consumption that uses electric energy. Electric energy consumption is the actual energy demand made on existing electricity supply.


The total electricity consumption in 2012 was 20,900 TWh.




Contents





  • 1 Overview

    • 1.1 World electricity consumption down in 2009



  • 2 World electricity consumption (2012)

    • 2.1 Consumption per head


    • 2.2 2012–2014



  • 3 Electricity generation and GDP (2009)


  • 4 Electricity final consumption by categories (2008)


  • 5 Electricity consumption of OECD member countries (2008)


  • 6 Electricity scenarios until 2040


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links




Overview[edit]


Electric energy is most often measured either in joules (J), or in watt hours (W·h) representing a constant power over a period of time.


1 W·s = 1 J

1 W·h = 3600 W·s = 3600 J

Electric and electronic devices consume electric energy to generate desired output (i.e., light, heat, motion, etc.). During operation, some part of the energy—depending on the electrical efficiency—is consumed in unintended output, such as waste heat.


Electricity has been generated in power stations since 1882.[2] The invention of the steam turbine in 1883 to drive the electric generator started a strong increase of world electricity consumption.


In 2008, the world total of electricity production was 20.279 petawatt-hours (PWh). This number corresponds to an average power of 2.31 TW continuously during the year. The total energy needed to produce this power is roughly a factor 2 to 3 higher because a power plant's efficiency of generating electricity is roughly 30–50%. The generated power is thus in the order of 5 TW. This is approximately a third of the total energy consumption of 15 TW (see world energy consumption).


In 2005, the primary energy used to generate electricity was 41.60 Quadrillion BTU [12, 192 TWh] (Coal 21.01 quads [6,157 TWh], Natural Gas 6.69 quads [1,960 TWh], Petroleum 1.32 quads [387 TWh], Nuclear electric power 8.13 quads [2,383 TWh], Renewable energy 4.23 quads [1,240 TWh] respectively). The gross generation of electricity in that year was 14.50 Quads [4,250 TWh]; the difference, 27.10 Quads [7,942 TWh], was conversion losses. Among all electricity, 4.84 Quads [1,418 TWh] was used in residential area, 4.32 Quads [1,266 TWh] used in commercial, 3.47 Quads [1,017 TWh] used in industrial and 0.03 Quads [8.79 TWh] used in transportation.


1 Quad = 1 Quadrillion BTU = 1 x 1015 BTU = 293 TWh


16,816 TWh (83%) of electric energy was consumed by final users. The difference of 3,464 TWh (17%) was consumed in the process of generating power and lost in transmission to end users.


A sensitivity analysis on an adaptive neuro-fuzzy network model for electric demand estimation shows that employment is the most critical factor influencing electrical consumption.[3] The study used six parameters as input data, employment, GDP, dwelling, population, HDD and CDD, with electricity demand as output variable.



World electricity consumption down in 2009[edit]




Electricity Consumption in 2009
Source: Enerdata Statistical Energy Review


At the world level, energy consumption was cut down by 1.5% during 2009, for the first time since World War II.[4]
Except in Asia and Middle East, consumptions were 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 demand related to high economic growth. In Middle East, growth rate was softened but remained high, just below 4%.



World electricity consumption (2012)[edit]


The table lists the top 37 electricity consuming countries, which use 19,000 TWh/a. i.e. 90% of the consumption of all more than 190 countries. The total consumption (including the amount consumed by the power plants) and the energy sources to generate this electricity is given per country. The data are of 2012.[5][6] The last column contains the number of millions of inhabitants.


























































































































































































































































































































RankCountryTotal TWhFossilNuclearRenewableInhabitants
(millions)

per capita (MWh/a)
WORLD20,900 (20.9 PWh)68%11%21%7,0402.97
1
 China
4,830 (4.83 PWh)78%2%20%1,3563.56
2
 United States
4,070 (4 PWh)66%19%13%31412.96
3
 Japan
98985%1% [7]12%1287.73
4
 Russia
94863%16%21%1446.58
5
 India
94081%3%16%1,2370.760
6
 Canada
54324%15%59%34.915.56
7
 Mexico
24675%2%23%1172.10
8
 Brazil
49817%1%82%1992.50
9
 Argentina
12454%4%41%41.13.02
10
 Venezuela
10235%065%30.03.40
11
 Germany
58557%15%25%81.97.14
12
 France
4829%75%16%65.47.37
13
 United Kingdom
34767%19%12%63.75.45
14
 Italy
32168%032%60.95.27
15
 Spain
26148%21%31%46.25.65
16
 Ukraine
16645%47%8%45.63.64
17
 Poland
14889%010%38.53.84
18
 Sweden
1362%38%60%9.514.3
19
 Norway
1192%098%5.023.8
20
 Netherlands
11581%4%14%16.86.85
21
 Belgium
88.935%48%14%11.18.01
22
 Finland
84.926%33%41%5.415.7
23
 Turkey
20773%027%74.92.76
24
 United Arab Emirates
93.7100%009.210.18
25
 South Korea
51770%28%2%5010.3
26
 Taiwan
24179%16%5%23.410.3
27
 Iran
18694%1%5%80.82.30
28
 Indonesia
18189%011%2470.733
29
 Thailand
16995%05%67.72.50
30
 Malaysia
12684%016%29.24.32
31
 Vietnam
10460%040%93.41.11
32
 Kazakhstan
85.488%012%16.85.08
33
 Pakistan
80.164%6%29%1790.447
34
 Australia
23689%09%23.110.2
35
 South Africa
24083%5%12%52.34.59
36
 Egypt
14688%012%80.71.81
37
 Iceland
---100%--


Consumption per head[edit]


Total consumption (2nd column) divided by number of inhabitants (last column) gives a country's consumption per head. In W-Europe this is between 5 and 8 MWh/a. (1 MWh equals 1000 kWh.) In Scandinavia, USA, Canada, Taiwan and South Korea it is much more, in developing countries much less. The worlds average is 3 MWh/a. A very low consumption per head, as in Indonesia, means that many inhabitants are not connected to the electricity grid, and this is the reason that the world's 7th and 8th most populous countries—Nigeria (177M) and Bangladesh (156M)—do not appear in the table.



2012–2014[edit]


From 2012 to 2014 worldwide electricity consumption increased 5%. Nuclear and fossil generated electricity rose 3%, renewable electricity 12%.


A small part of the renewables, solar and wind electricity, increased much more, 46%[8] in line with the strong growth since 1990.[9]


In Brazil windpower inceased 140%, in China not only solar and wind increased fast, 81%, but also nuclear, 36%.



Electricity generation and GDP (2009)[edit]


Listed countries are top 20 populous countries and/or top 20 GDP (PPP) countries and Saudi Arabia as of CIA World Factbook 2009.

30 countries (exclude EU/IEA) in this table represent 77% of world population, 84% of world GDP, 83% of world electricity generation.

Productivity per Electricity generation (concept similar to Energy intensity) can be measured by dividing GDP amount by the electricity generated. World average was $3.5 production/kWh.

Electricity generation include Final consumption, in process consumption, and losses.















































































































































































































































































































































































































Electricity Generation (2008) and GDP (PPP) (2009)
Country
Population
million
rank*
GDP (PPP)
billion USD
rank*
GDP (PPP)
per capita
rank*
Electricity
generation
(GWh/yr)
rank**
daily kWh
per capita
rank**
GDP (PPP)
/kWh*

 China
1,3391$7,9922$5,9691333,444,10827.0417$2.3

 India
1,1662$3,3044$2,834166860,72352.0223$3.8

 USA
3073$14,4401$47,036114,401,698139.252$3.3

 EU*
541$16,221$29,9833,635,60418.40$4.5

 Indonesia
2404$91715$3,821158149,437201.7024$6.1

 Brazil
1995$1,9989$10,040102505,08396.9518$4.0

 Pakistan
1766$43127$2,44917291,626241.4326$4.7

 Bangladesh
1567$22649$1,44919635,893270.6327$6.3

 Nigeria
1498$33635$2,25517621,110280.3928$15.9

 Russia
1409$2,2716$16,221721,022,726420.0010$2.2

 Japan
12710$4,3403$34,173361,083,142323.356$4.0

 Mexico
11111$1,56711$14,11777257,812146.3619$6.1

 Philippines
9812$31837$3,42516260,819261.7025$5.2

 Vietnam
8713$24245$2,78216776,269252.4022$3.2

 Ethiopia
8514$7078$8242163,777300.1230$18.5

 Egypt
8315$44526$5,361135130,144224.2921$3.4

 Germany
8216$2,9255$35,67133617,132720.618$4.7

 Turkey
7717$90416$11,74092198,085197.0416$4.6

 DR Congo
6918$21120$3042266,939290.2829$3.0

 Iran
7519$84417$12,78886211,972178.7915$4.0

 Thailand
6620$54924$8,318115149,034216.1820$3.7

 France
6421$2,1338$33,32838526,862822.547$4.0

 UK
6122$2,2367$36,65630400,3901117.9713$5.6

 Italy
5823$1,82710$31,50041359,1611216.9514$5.1

 South Korea
4925$1,33813$27,30649443,8881024.805$3.0

 Spain
4132$1,40212$34,19535303,1791320.259$4.6

 Canada
3337$1,30314$39,48522620,684651.501$2.1

 Saudi Arabia
2941$57822$19,93159204,2001819.2812$2.8

 Taiwan
2349$71419$31,04342238,4581628.394$3.0

 Australia
2154$80318$38,23825257,2471533.543$3.1

 Netherlands
1759$67420$39,64720123,4962319.8911$5.66
World6,784$70,048$10,32520,279,6408.18$3.5


  • Population and GDP data are from CIA World Factbook 2009


  • Electricity data are from IEA/OECD 2008[10] (retrieved on April 2011)


  • rank* of Population and GDP are World ranking


  • rank** of Electricity consumption are ranking within this list


  • GDP PP/kWh Amount of GDP (PPP) (USD) produced per every kilowatt-hour


  • EU* only considers EU states which are member of the IEA (Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom) but also includes non-EU members of the IEA (Norway, Switzerland and Turkey).


Electricity final consumption by categories (2008)[edit]


About 17% of total electricity production is consumed by in-processes, such as self-consumption of power plants, grid losses and storage losses. In 2008, total electricity generation accounted for 20,261 TWh (20.26 PWh), while 3,464 TWh (3.46 PWh) were self-consumption and losses and 16,816 TWh (16.82 PWh) went to final consumption.[10]


In the consumption rate in Industry, China is highest with 67.8%, South Korea is 51.0% (7th), Germany 46.1% (11th), Japan 31.5% (26th), USA 24.0% (28th) In the Commercial and Public Service, Japan is highest with 36.4%, USA 35.6% (3rd), China 5.4% (29th). For Domestic usage, Saudi Arabia is highest with 56.9%, USA 36.2% (8th), Japan 29.8% (16th), China 15.5% (29th), Korea 13.8% (30th).


Definition



  • Industry: iron and steel, chemical and petrochemical, non-ferrous metals, non-metallic minerals, transport equipment, machinery, mining, Food and tobacco, Paper, pulp and print, wood and wood product, construction, textile and leather, non-specified.


  • Transport: domestic aviation, Land transportation, Rail, Pipeline transport, domestic navigation, non-specified. note international marine and aviation bunkers are not included.


  • Fishery: some country include fishing with agriculture or forestry.


































































































































































































































































































Electricity Consumption 2008 (TWh)
Country/ Geographical Region
Total
(TWh)
Industry
Transport
Commercial
/Public
Services
Agriculture
/Forestry
Fishery
Residential
other

 China
2,84267.8%1.05%5.4%3.12%0.000%15.5%7.19%

 India
60246.4%1.93%8.0%17.92%0.000%20.7%5.05%

 USA
3,81424.0%0.20%35.0%0.00%0.000%36.2%4.59%

 Indonesia
12937.2%0.00%23.9%0.00%0.000%38.9%0.00%

 Brazil
41048.1%0.39%23.7%4.49%0.000%23.3%0.00%

 Pakistan
7027.5%0.01%14.2%12.50%0.000%45.9%0.00%

 Bangladesh
3256.3%0.00%6.0%3.37%0.000%32.9%0.00%

 Nigeria
1920.0%0.00%24.7%0.00%0.000%55.3%0.00%

 Russia
72549.6%11.45%20.6%2.14%0.037%16.1%0.00%

 Japan
96431.5%1.95%36.4%0.09%0.000%29.8%0.23%

 Mexico
20061.3%0.55%10.3%4.05%0.000%23.7%0.00%

 Philippines
4934.6%0.23%28.7%2.30%0.311%33.8%0.00%

 Vietnam
6851.8%0.75%8.1%0.97%0.000%38.4%0.00%

 Ethiopia
3.138.0%0.00%23.6%0.00%0.000%37.7%0.74%

 Egypt
11233.4%0.00%15.4%4.13%0.000%39.2%7.84%

 Germany
52646.1%3.14%22.6%1.66%0.000%26.5%0.00%

 Turkey
15945.4%0.60%25.6%3.54%0.102%24.8%0.00%

 DR Congo
6.163.4%0.00%3.1%0.00%0.000%33.5%0.00%

 Iran
16433.2%0.15%19.0%12.92%0.001%32.3%2.50%

 Thailand
13542.4%0.04%35.6%0.21%0.000%21.3%0.54%

 France
43332.6%3.06%25.0%0.88%0.028%35.9%2.57%

 UK
34233.2%2.47%28.6%1.19%0.000%34.5%0.00%

 Italy
30945.8%3.50%26.8%1.81%0.022%22.1%0.00%

 South Korea
40751.0%0.55%32.5%1.61%0.449%13.8%0.00%

 Spain
26538.9%1.10%29.5%2.29%0.000%27.1%1.08%

 Canada
51936.3%0.81%30.0%1.86%0.000%31.0%0.00%

 Saudi Arabia
17012.4%0.00%28.5%2.04%0.000%56.9%0.14%

 Taiwan
21055.7%0.52%13.7%0.78%0.459%20.3%8.48%

 Australia
21244.7%1.33%25.6%0.88%0.000%27.4%0.00%

 Netherlands
10938.6%1.48%30.0%7.15%0.000%22.7%0.00%
World16,81641.7%1.60%23.4%2.50%0.025%27.4%3.43%

Notes:
  • For more recent data World Electricity production 2012 [11]

  • Listed are top 20 countries, either by population or by GDP (PPP), as well as Saudi Arabia.


Electricity consumption of OECD member countries (2008)[edit]


Electric energy consumption per inhabitant by primary energy source in some countries and areas in 2008 is in the table.


1 MW·h/yr = 114 watt

For the OECD with 8 991 kWh/yr/person: 1.026 watt/person.































































































































































































































Electric energy per capita for 2008, in kilowatt-hour per person[12]
#
Territory
Use
Production
Import/
Export
Non-RE*

RE % *
Total

Fossil

Nuclear

RE-Bio

Bio+waste
1Iceland53,12953,1290053,129000100%
2Norway27,39830,355151030,13074-2,957-2,806110.2%
3Canada18,11119,0924,6532,83411,333272-9816,50764.1%
4
Finland*
17,03614,6125,1824,345x3,3561,7272,42411,95329.8%
5Sweden16,01816,2255276,9227,6871,088-2067,24454.8%
6USA14,37814,27010,1622,7461,13922410813,0159.5%
7Switzerland9,0529,1981303,6885,057322-1463,67259.4%
8OECD8,9918,9825,5541,9051,34018297,46816.9%
9Belgium8,9617,9622,9974,2952524189998,2917.5%
10Japan8,5078,5075,6692,01068214707,6799.7%
11France8,2338,9848536,8721,16891-7516,97415.3%
12Netherlands7,4636,5135,5902522753969506,7929.0%
13Germany7,4507,6934,6351,804873381-2436,1966.8%
14EU-157,4097,3213,7982,1211,141261896,00718.9%
15Denmark6,9126,6564,68001,2727062564,93428.6%
16United Kingdom6,5736,3925,0698602661981806,1087.1%
17Spain6,5236,7644,0661,2861,31894-2415,11121.6%
18Italy6,0545,3844,27109921206714,94218.4%
19Poland4,0334,0643,865096103-323,8335.0%


  • RE-Bio includes hydro power, wind power, solar power and geothermal electricity


  • Bio+waste includes biofuel and waste


  • Non-RE (Non-Renewable electricity) = electricity use – (RE-Bio) – (Bio+waste)


  • RE % = (own RE production (RE+ Bio+waste) / electricity use) * 100%


  • Obs. No specification if waste includes fossil wastes (e.g. The share of fossil wastes in Finland in 2006 was 2% of electricity use 1.78/90TWh). Norway exported 2.8 TWh per person renewable electricity.

  • In Finland 1,600 MW nuclear reactor under construction since 2002


Electricity scenarios until 2040[edit]


In all scenarios, increasing efficiency will result in less electricity needed for a given demand of power and light. But demand will increase strongly on account of


  • growing economy in developing countries and

  • electrification of transport and heating. Combustion engines are replaced by electric drive and for heating less gas and oil, but more electricity is used, if possible with heat pumps.

As transport and heating become more climate-friendly, the environmental effect of energy consumption will be more determined by electricity. This is mainly supplied by burning fossil fuel which disturbs the natural carbon cycle. The scenarios arrive at very different results for the environment.


The International Energy Agency expects revision of subsidy for fossil fuel which amounted to 550 billion dollar in 2013, more than four times renewable energy subsidy. In this scenario[13] almost half of the increase in 2040 of electricity consumption is covered by more than 80% growth of renewable energy. Many new nuclear plants will be constructed, mainly to replace old ones. The nuclear part of electricity generation will increase from 11 to 12%. The renewable part goes up much, from 21 to 33%. The IEA warns that in order to restrict global warming to 2 °C, the carbon dioxide emission[14] must not exceed 1000 gigaton (Gt) from 2014. This limit is reached in 2040 and emissions will not drop to zero ever.


The World Energy Council[15] sees world electricity consumption increasing to more than 40,000 TWh/a in 2040. The fossil part of generation depends on energy policy. It can stay around 70% in the so-called Jazz scenario where countries rather independently "improvise" but it can also decrease to around 40% in the Symphony scenario if countries work "orchestrated" for more climate friendly policy. Carbon dioxide emission, 32 Gt/a in 2012, will increase to 46 Gt/a in Jazz but decrease to 26 Gt/a in Symphony. Accordingly, until 2040 the renewable part of generation will stay at about 20% in Jazz but increase to about 45% in Symphony.



See also[edit]



  • Electricity generation

  • List of countries by electric energy consumption

  • List of countries by electricity production

  • List of countries by energy consumption and production

  • List of countries by energy consumption per capita

  • List of countries by total primary energy consumption and production

  • List of countries by energy intensity

  • List of countries by carbon dioxide emissions

  • List of countries by greenhouse gas emissions

  • List of countries by renewable electricity production

  • World energy consumption

  • Worldwide energy supply



References[edit]




  1. ^
    "2017 Key World Energy Statistics" (PDF). International Energy Agency (IEA). 2017. p. 30. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 May 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em



  2. ^ "Electricity Generation". Institute for Energy Research. Institute for Energy Research. 2 September 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2015.


  3. ^ Zahedi, Gholamreza; Azizi, Saeed; Bahadori, Alireza; Elkamel, Ali; R. Wan Alwi, Sharifah (2013). "Electricity demand estimation using an adaptive neuro-fuzzy network: A case study from the Ontario province – Canada". Energy. 49: 323–328. doi:10.1016/j.energy.2012.10.019.


  4. ^ Enerdata Statistical Review 2012


  5. ^ IEA World energy statistics


  6. ^ IEA Statistics search


  7. ^ 25% before the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster


  8. ^ Compare World: IEA Statistics search, World, Electricity and Heat, 2012 and 2014.


  9. ^ IEA Key Renewables Trends


  10. ^ ab IEA/OECD IEA Statistics/Electricity and Heat by country


  11. ^ World Electricity production 2012


  12. ^ Energiläget i siffror 2009 Archived January 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Energimyndigheten Sweden, Table 25: Specific electricity production per inhabitant with breakdown by power source, 2008, kWh/person, Source: Electricity information 2009 IEA/OECD


  13. ^ IEA World energy outlook


  14. ^ by fossil fuel


  15. ^ World energy scenarios



External links[edit]


  • World Electricity production 2012


  • World Map and Chart of Energy Consumption by country by Lebanese-economy-forum, World Bank data









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