安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- IEA – International Energy Agency
The IEA is at the heart of the global dialogue on energy Learn more about our mission We provide authoritative analysis, data, policy recommendations and solutions to ensure energy security and help the world transition to clean energy
- World Energy Outlook 2024 – Analysis - IEA
The IEA's flagship World Energy Outlook, published every year, is the most authoritative global source of energy analysis and projections It identifies and explores the biggest trends in energy demand and supply, as well as what they mean for energy security, emissions and economic development
- All Analysis - IEA
Search, filter, explore and download IEA analysis, reports and publications across all fuels and technologies
- Global Energy Review 2025 – Analysis - IEA
The IEA has discontinued providing data in the Beyond 2020 format (IVT files and through WDS) Data is now available through the Stat Data Explorer, which also allows users to export data in Excel and CSV formats
- Executive summary – Renewables 2024 – Analysis - IEA
Renewable fuels require dedicated policy support to align with the IEA’s scenario for achieving net zero energy sector emissions by 2050 To align with this pathway, renewable fuel adoption must nearly double by 2030 However, under today’s market conditions, it is projected to grow by only 20%
- IEA – International Energy Agency - IEA
From policy ambition to real action, the IEA’s latest interactive database provides country and regional outlooks on climate commitments and net zero pledges Dive in deeper to the explorer Browse historical and projected data on EVs
- Global Critical Minerals Outlook 2025 – Analysis - IEA
Global demand projections for 37 critical minerals needed for clean energy transitions across the three main IEA scenarios and 11 technology-specific cases
- Key findings – Global Energy Review 2025 – Analysis - IEA
Global oil demand growth slowed markedly in 2024, in line with the IEA’s forecast Oil’s share of total energy demand fell below 30% for the first time ever , 50 years after peaking at 46% Demand for oil rose by 0 8% in 2024, compared with a 1 9% increase in 2023
|
|
|