The IEA report shows that countries are not yet on track for this goal, requiring stronger action and cooperation to align with their stated ambitions. Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG7) calls for “affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all” by 2030.
One year on from the historic global
pledge at COP28 to double the rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030,
new analysis from the IEA shows that countries are not yet on track for this
goal, requiring stronger action and cooperation to align with their stated
ambitions.
The
2023 Tracking SDG7 Report estimated 660 million people would still lack access in 2030, most of them in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Energy Efficiency 2024, the IEA’s annual report on energy
efficiency developments around the world, finds that global primary energy
intensity – a measure of efficiency – is set to improve by around 1% in 2024.
At the same time, some 2.3 billion people remained without access to
clean cooking in 2021, one third of the global population. Largely
stagnant progress since 2010 leads to millions of deaths each year from
breathing cooking smoke, and without rapid action to scale up clean
cooking the world will fall short of its target by 30 percent come
2030.
This is the same rate as in 2023, and around half of the average rate between
2010 and 2019. At the COP28 climate change conference in Dubai last year,
nearly 200 countries agreed to the goal of doubling the rate of progress, which
would mean increasing it from 2% in 2022 to 4% by 2030.
Boosting energy efficiency is about
getting more from everyday technologies and industrial processes for the same
amount of energy input, and means more jobs, healthier cities and a range of
other benefits. Improving the efficiency of buildings and vehicles, as well as
in other areas, is central to clean energy transitions, since it simultaneously
improves energy security, lowers energy bills for consumers and reduces
greenhouse gas emissions.
The new report shows that
governments worldwide are making policy progress, with those representing more
than 70% of global energy demand implementing new or updated efficiency
policies in 2024.
The European Union, for example,
revised regulations to achieve a zero-emission building stock by 2050; China
overhauled appliance standards and strengthened national targets for efficiency;
the United States tightened its fuel economy standards for heavy-duty vehicles;
and Kenya made its building code mandatory to ensure all new buildings are more
efficient.
However, to align with global targets, fresh policies need to arrive
more quickly around the world, and many existing ones need to be tightened,
according to the report.
“Energy efficiency is a key pillar
of secure, affordable and inclusive energy transitions.The IEA is working
closer than ever with governments around the world to ensure that it
remains a top policy priority,” said IEA Executive Director
Fatih Birol.
“Fortunately, the policies and technologies
to accelerate efficiency progress are readily available today,
and many governments are taking important steps forward. What we hope to
see now is faster and stronger policy responses across the globe.”
To increase visibility on energy
efficiency and support stronger progress towards the global doubling target,
the IEA launched a new
Energy Efficiency Progress Tracker
today alongside the report – extending the analysis of
Energy Efficiency
2024 to provide detailed insights via the most up-to-date regional
indicators on energy intensity, demand and electrification levels.
According to the report, there
are important elements of progress worth noting, especially in major emerging
economies and in the growing global deployment rates of heat pumps and electric
vehicles, which generally use much less energy than the technologies they
replace.
However, greater efficiency will
need substantially more investment. Investment in energy-efficient technologies
grew by 4% in 2024 – and is on course to reach a record $660 billion,
according to the report.