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US CO2 Emissions Rose Most Globally in 2025, Report Finds

Created at 29 Jun · 11:25 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

The United States was responsible for approximately one-third of the global increase in carbon emissions in 2025, as higher natural gas prices led power producers to increase coal consumption, according to an Energy Institute report.

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Key Numbers

33%US share of global CO2 emissions increase
1.1%Global energy sector carbon emissions growth
35,806 million metric tonsTotal global CO2 emissions
10%US coal consumption jump
0.7%10-year trend of North American emissions decline
1.7%Global total energy supply growth
9.1%Renewable power generation increase
30%Solar power surge
0.5%Europe's energy sector emissions growth
0.7%China's energy sector emissions growth
3%Global electricity demand growth
1.3%Global oil consumption growth
103 million barrels per dayGlobal oil consumption
3.5%Global oil production growth

Who's Involved

Energy Institute
Author of the report on global energy trends
Ember
Partner in producing the energy report
Kearney Institute
Partner in producing the energy report
KPMG
Partner in producing the energy report

↳ Why This Matters

The report highlights a significant setback in global efforts to reduce carbon emissions, with the US reversing progress and contributing disproportionately to the increase. This trend poses challenges to climate goals and underscores the complex interplay between energy prices, fuel choices, and environmental targets.

Key facts

  • US coal consumption increased by 10% in 2025.
  • Global carbon emissions from the energy sector rose 1.1% to 35,806 million metric tons.
  • The US contributed over a third of the global increase in emissions.
  • Renewable power generation increased by 9.1%, with solar power surging 30%.
  • Global oil consumption rose 1.3% to 103 million barrels per day.

The United States was the primary driver of the increase in global carbon emissions in 2025, accounting for approximately one-third of the rise. This surge was largely attributed to higher natural gas prices, which prompted power producers to increase their reliance on coal, leading to a 10% jump in US coal consumption. Globally, energy sector carbon emissions grew by 1.1% to 35,806 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, a trend that contrasted with a decade-long pattern of declining emissions in North America. Despite the rise in emissions, global energy demand continued to grow by 1.7%, with renewable energy sources, particularly solar power which saw a 30% increase, contributing the largest share of this growth. Europe's emissions from the energy sector increased by 0.5%, and China's by 0.7%. Global electricity demand outpaced supply growth, rising 3% year-on-year, fueled by electric vehicles, data centers, and artificial intelligence. Oil consumption also increased by 1.3% to 103 million barrels per day, while production saw a 3.5% rise.

Frequently asked questions

Higher natural gas prices in 2025 pushed power producers back to using coal.

Global carbon emissions from the energy sector rose by 1.1% to 35,806 million metric tons of carbon dioxide.

Renewable power generation climbed 9.1%, with solar power leading the increase with a 30% surge.

Global oil consumption rose 1.3% to 103 million barrels per day, while production grew 3.5%.

What Happens Next

01The report details trends in global energy consumption and production for 2025.

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How It Developed

Global carbon emissions from the energy sector rose 1.1% to 35,806 million metric tons of CO2.
The US accounted for over a third of this global increase.
US coal consumption jumped 10%, reversing a trend towards cleaner fuels.
North America's emissions increase bucked a 10-year trend of falling emissions.
Global energy-related demand grew 1.7%, with renewables contributing the largest share.
Renewable power generation climbed 9.1%, led by a 30% surge in solar.
Europe's energy sector emissions rose 0.5%, while China's increased 0.7%.
Global electricity demand rose 3%, driven by EVs, data centers, and AI.

Sources

T1
US leads global CO2 emissions increase in 2025, report findsReuters

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