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Earth

Renewables Soar, But Fossil Fuels Continue To Rise as Global Electricity Demand Hits Record Levels (energyinst.org) 34

In a year when average air temperatures consistently breached the 1.5C warming threshold, global COâ-equivalent emissions from energy rose by 1%, marking yet another record, the fourth in as many years. From a report: Wind and solar energy alone expanded by an impressive 16% in 2024, nine times faster than total energy demand. Yet this growth did not fully counterbalance rising demand elsewhere, with total fossil fuel use growing by just over 1%, highlighting a transition defined as much by disorder as by progress.

Crude oil demand in OECD countries remained flat, following a slight decline in the previous year. In contrast, non-OECD countries, where much of the world's energy demand growth is concentrated and fossil fuels continue to play a dominant role, saw oil demand rise by 1%. Notably, Chinese crude oil demand fell in 2024 by 1.2%, indicating that 2023 may have reached a peak. Elsewhere, global natural gas demand rebounded, rising by 2.5% as gas markets rebalanced after the 2023 slump. India's demand for coal rose 4% in 2024 and now equals that of the CIS, Southern and Central America, North America, and Europe combined.

Renewables Soar, But Fossil Fuels Continue To Rise as Global Electricity Demand Hits Record Levels

Comments Filter:
  • Turn off the AI (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 27, 2025 @05:05PM (#65481012)

    How do we fair if we turn off all of the AI bullshit?

  • There is no clean way to produce the amount of electricity needed in the modern world. Renewables sound great, but so did nuclear... until reality set in. Don't get me wrong, nuclear is still good, just not unicorns and rainbows good like was originally presented.

    We have no idea of what the actual cost is for solar as China has been dumping cheap panels on the market for years. We also have no real data on how much power is required to make them or what kind of toxic waste is involved with their manufactu

    • Depressing, but I fear you are correct. I expect the bottom line is there are way too many top tier predators. And unfortunately, humans are particularly bad as we don't just eat, we consume, everything. And with AI/robots, that consumption could easily 10X what people used to consume.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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