Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Asia to use half of all electricit­y by 2025; China alone, one-third

- FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — Asia will for the first time use half of the world’s electricit­y by 2025, even as Africa continues to consume far less than its share of the global population, according to a new forecast released last week by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Much of Asia’s electricit­y use will be in China, a nation of 1.4 billion people whose share of global consumptio­n will rise from a quarter in 2015 to a third by the middle of this decade, the Paris-based body said.

“China will be consuming more electricit­y than the European Union, United States and India combined,” said Keisuke Sadamori, the IEA’s director of energy markets and security.

By contrast, Africa — home to almost a fifth of world’s nearly 8 billion inhabitant­s — will account for just 3% of global electricit­y consumptio­n in 2025.

“This and the rapidly growing population mean there is still a massive need for increased electrific­ation in Africa,” said Sadamori.

The IEA’s annual report predicts that nuclear power and renewables such as wind and solar will account for much of the growth in global electricit­y supply over the coming three years. This will prevent a significan­t rise in greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector, it said.

Scientists say sharp cuts in all sources of emissions are needed as soon as possible to keep average global temperatur­es from rising 2.7 degrees above pre-industrial levels.

One hope for meeting the goal is a wholesale shift away from fossil fuels such as coal, gas and oil toward lowcarbon sources of energy. But while some regions are reducing their use of coal and gas for electricit­y production, in others consumptio­n is increasing, the IEA said.

The 134-page report also warned that electricit­y demand and supply are becom

ing increasing­ly weather dependent, a problem it urged policymake­rs to address.

“In addition to drought in Europe, there were heat waves in India [last year],” said Sadamori. “Similarly, central and eastern China were hit by heat waves and drought. The United States also saw severe winter storms in December, and all those events put massive strain on the power systems of these regions.”

“As the clean energy transition gathers pace, the impact of weather events on electricit­y demand will intensify due to the increased electrific­ation of heating, while the share of weatherdep­endent renewables will continue to grow in the generation mix,” the IEA said. “In such a world, increasing the flexibilit­y of power systems while ensuring security of supply and resilience of networks will be crucial.”

 ?? (AP/Chinatopix) ?? In this September 2021 file photo, steam billows out of the cooling towers at a coal-fired power station in Nanjing in eastern China’s Jiangsu province.
(AP/Chinatopix) In this September 2021 file photo, steam billows out of the cooling towers at a coal-fired power station in Nanjing in eastern China’s Jiangsu province.

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