Strong growth in electricity demand is raising the curtain on a new Age of Electricity, with consumption set to soar through 2027.
The International Energy Agency’s Electricity 2025 provides a deep and comprehensive analysis of all these trends as well as recent policy developments. For the period 2025 through 2027
The world’s electricity consumption
is forecast to rise at its fastest pace in recent years, growing at close to 4%
annually through 2027 as power use climbs in a range of sectors across the
economy, according to a new IEA report released today.
Electricity
2025, the latest edition of the International
Energy Agency’s (IEA) main market analysis of the sector, forecasts that the
growth in global demand will be the equivalent of adding an amount greater than
Japan’s annual electricity consumption every year between now and 2027.
The surge is primarily driven by
robust growing use of electricity for industrial production, increased demand
for air conditioning, accelerating electrification, led by the transport
sector, and the rapid expansion of data centres.
Most of the additional demand over
the next three years will come from emerging and developing economies, which
account for 85% of the demand growth.
The trend is most pronounced in
China where electricity demand has been growing faster than the overall economy
since 2020. China's electricity consumption rose by 7% in 2024 and is expected
to grow by an average of around 6% through 2027.
The demand growth in China has been
fuelled in part by the industrial sector, where alongside the traditional
energy-intensive sectors, the rapidly expanding electricity-intensive
manufacturing of solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles and associated
materials played a significant role. Air conditioning, electric vehicle adoption,
data centres and 5G networks are additional contributors.
IEA
Director of Energy Markets and Security Keisuke Sadamori said the
acceleration of global electricity demand highlights the significant changes
taking place in energy systems around the world and the approach of a new Age
of Electricity.
“But it also presents evolving
challenges for governments in ensuring secure, affordable and sustainable
electricity supply,” he said.
He notes that while emerging and
developing economies are set to drive the large majority of the growth in
global electricity demand in the coming years, consumption is also expected to
increase in many advanced economies after a period of relative stagnation.
“Policy makers need to pay close
attention to these shifting dynamics, which will be addressed at the
international Summit on the Future of Energy Security that the IEA is hosting
with the UK government in London in April.” he suggested.
The new report forecasts that growth
in low-emissions sources – primarily renewables and nuclear – is sufficient, in
aggregate, to cover all the growth in global electricity demand over the next
three years. In particular, generation from solar PV is forecast to meet
roughly half of global electricity demand growth through 2027, supported
by continued cost reductions and policy support.
Electricity generation from solar PV
surpassed that from coal in the European Union in 2024, with solar’s share of
the power mix exceeding 10%. China, the United States and India are all
expected to see solar PV’s share of annual electricity generation reach 10%
between now and 2027.
At the same time, nuclear power is making a strong
comeback, with its electricity generation on course to hit new highs every year
from 2025 onward over the forecast period. As a result of these forecast
trends, carbon dioxide emissions from global electricity generation are
expected to plateau in the coming years after increasing by about 1% in 2024.
The report examines some of the
major strains faced by electricity systems in 2024, including winter storms in
the United States, hurricanes in the Atlantic, blackouts caused by extreme
weather in Brazil and Australia, and droughts reducing hydropower in Ecuador,
Colombia and Mexico.
These events highlight the importance of ensuring greater
resilience of electricity systems, the report notes.
It also looks at the critical role
of weather for electricity systems and the rising volatility in wholesale
electricity prices in some regions, which indicate a growing need for system
flexibility.
Incidences of negative wholesale electricity prices have been
rising in some power markets, although they are still relatively uncommon
globally. These occurrences broadly signal insufficient flexibility in the
system due to technical, regulatory or contractual reasons.