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North America Drove Nearly Half Of Global Emissions Growth In 2025

Created at 7 Jul · 12:35 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

North America was responsible for 47% of the global increase in carbon dioxide emissions in 2025, a significant reversal of previous trends. Despite rapid growth in renewables, rising energy demand and a rebound in coal-fired generation contributed to the surge.

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Key Numbers

1.4%global total energy supply increase in 2025
10%renewable energy supply growth in 2025
8.1 exajoulestotal increase in global energy supply
3.2 exajoulesrenewable energy's contribution to total energy supply increase
4.6 exajoulescombined fossil fuel supply increase
201.0 exajoulesoil supply in 2025
150.7 exajoulesnatural gas supply in 2025
166.0 exajoulescoal supply in 2025
86%fossil fuels' share of global total energy supply in 2025
5.9%renewables' share of global total energy supply in 2025
5.2%nuclear's share of global total energy supply in 2025
2.7%hydroelectricity's share of global total energy supply in 2025
47%North America's share of global CO2 emissions increase in 2025
3.2%U.S. emissions increase in 2025
13%U.S. coal-fired generation increase in 2025
3%U.S. electricity demand increase in 2025
40%U.S. share of global data center electricity consumption
28%U.S. solar generation growth in 2025
19%renewables' share of U.S. electricity in 2025
19%U.S. share of global installed battery capacity
75%North America's energy supply from oil and natural gas
21%U.S. share of global oil production in 2025
26%U.S. share of global natural gas production in 2025
25%U.S. share of global LNG exports
23%U.S. share of global oil product exports
283.8 exajoulesAsia Pacific total energy supply in 2025
162.2 exajoulesChina's energy supply in 2025
25%China's share of global total energy supply in 2025
39.1 exajoulesIndia's energy supply in 2025
113.7 exajoulesNorth America total energy supply in 2025
72.1 exajoulesEurope total energy supply in 2025
35.4 exajoulesglobal renewable energy supply in 2025

Who's Involved

Energy Institute
Publisher of the 2026 Statistical Review of World Energy
Ember
Partner in the 2026 Statistical Review of World Energy
KPMG
Collaborator in the 2026 Statistical Review of World Energy
Kearney
Collaborator in the 2026 Statistical Review of World Energy
BP
Previous publisher of the Statistical Review of World Energy
North America Drove Nearly Half Of Global Emissions Growth In 2025

↳ Why This Matters

The findings underscore the persistent challenge of the global energy transition, where rapid growth in renewables is being outpaced by rising overall energy demand, leading to continued increases in fossil fuel consumption and carbon emissions. North America's significant contribution to emissions growth highlights the complex interplay between energy abundance, demand, and climate goals.

Key facts

  • North America accounted for 47% of the global increase in carbon dioxide emissions in 2025.
  • Global energy demand rose 1.4% in 2025, while renewable energy supply increased by nearly 10%.
  • Fossil fuels still supplied approximately 86% of global total energy in 2025.
  • U.S. emissions increased by 3.2% in 2025, driven by a rebound in coal-fired electricity generation.
  • The U.S. accounted for 40% of global data center electricity consumption in 2025.

The world continues to increase clean energy capacity at an impressive rate, but rising global energy demand means fossil fuel consumption and carbon emissions are still growing, according to the 2026 Statistical Review of World Energy. In 2025, global total energy supply increased by 1.4%, with renewables growing by nearly 10% in percentage terms but only contributing 3.2 exajoules to the total 8.1 exajoules increase. Fossil fuels, meanwhile, increased by 4.6 exajoules, accounting for more than half of the total energy supply growth and maintaining an 86% share of the global energy mix.

North America was a significant contributor to the rise in emissions, responsible for 47% of the global increase in carbon dioxide emissions in 2025. U.S. emissions rose 3.2%, driven by a 13% increase in coal-fired generation and a 3% rise in electricity demand. The U.S. also accounted for 40% of global data center electricity consumption, highlighting the energy footprint of digital infrastructure. Despite strong growth in solar power and battery capacity, clean energy expansion did not outpace demand and fossil fuel use.

The report also highlights North America's energy abundance, with oil and natural gas supplying over three-quarters of the region's energy. The U.S. remains the world's largest oil and gas producer and a major exporter of LNG and oil products. This contrasts with Europe's import-dependent energy situation. However, this energy abundance in North America means the region faces challenges in rapidly reducing emissions unless low-carbon energy scales faster than demand.

Globally, Asia Pacific remains the largest energy-consuming region, led by China, while Europe's energy supply was largely flat. The review emphasizes that energy transitions are diverging globally, shaped by regional resources, politics, and economic development. Solar power continues its strong growth trajectory, but the broader energy system's ability to adapt and displace fossil fuels remains a key challenge for the energy transition.

Frequently asked questions

It is an annual reference for understanding the global energy system, published by the Energy Institute in partnership with Ember and in collaboration with KPMG and Kearney. It was previously published by BP for over 70 years.

The report indicates that despite impressive growth in clean energy, global energy demand is rising fast enough that fossil fuel consumption and carbon emissions continue to increase.

North America was responsible for nearly half, or 47%, of the global increase in carbon dioxide emissions in 2025.

A 13% increase in U.S. coal-fired generation, coupled with a 3% rise in electricity demand and the growing energy footprint of data centers, contributed to the emissions increase.

What Happens Next

01The Energy Institute will release further analysis on oil, natural gas, coal, renewables, electricity, and carbon dioxide emissions from the report.
02Further examination of regional energy transitions and their unique challenges is expected.

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How It Developed

Global total energy supply increased by 1.4% in 2025.
Renewable energy supply grew by nearly 10% globally.
Fossil fuel consumption increased, accounting for over half of the total energy supply growth.
North America accounted for 47% of the global increase in carbon dioxide emissions in 2025.
U.S. emissions rose 3.2% due to a 13% increase in coal-fired generation.
U.S. data center electricity consumption accounted for 40% of the global total.
North America remains a major oil and gas producer and exporter.
Asia Pacific is the largest energy-consuming region, followed by North America.

Sources

T1
North America Drove Nearly Half Of Global Emissions Growth In 2025OilPrice.com

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