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International Energy Agency (IEA)
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The IEA is at the heart of global dialogue on energy, providing authoritative analysis, data, policy recommendations, and real-world solutions to help countries provide secure and sustainable energy for all. The IEA was created in 1974 to help co-ordinate a collective response to major disruptions in the supply of oil. While oil security this remains a key aspect of our work, the IEA has evolved and expanded significantly since its foundation. Taking an all-fuels, all-technology approach, the IEA recommends policies that enhance the reliability, affordability and sustainability of energy. It examines the full spectrum issues including renewables, oil, gas and coal supply and demand, energy efficiency, clean energy technologies, electricity systems and markets, access to energy, demand-side management, and much more. Since 2015, the IEA has opened its doors to major emerging countries to expand its global impact, and deepen cooperation in energy security, data and statistics, energy policy analysis, energy efficiency, and the growing use of clean energy technologies.

Available DatasetsShowing 16 of 16 results
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  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. The IEA produced this dataset as part of efforts to track advances in low-carbon hydrogen technology. It covers all projects commissioned worldwide since 2000 to produce hydrogen for energy or climate-change-mitigation purposes. It includes projects which their objective is either to reduce emissions associated with producing hydrogen for existing applications, or to use hydrogen as an energy carrier or industrial feedstock in new applications that have the potential to be a low-carbon technology. Projects in planning or construction are also covered.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 2 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. Monthly gas flow data by entry and exit point for 31 participating countries, principally covering the European natural gas network. The Gas Trade Flows (GTF) data service is intended to improve transparency in natural gas markets. This free service is based on an IEA data collection system that principally covers the European natural gas network, including pipeline and LNG physical flows by entry point.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 2 years ago
  • This report, updated monthly, provides data on natural gas production, consumption, total imports and total exports for all OECD Member countries, and natural gas pipeline and LNG trade by origin and destination for all OECD regions.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 2 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. The global CO2 emissions and energy demand numbers are based on the IEA’s detailed region-by-region and fuel-by-fuel analysis, drawing on the latest official national data and publicly available energy, economic and weather data. Combined with the methane emissions estimates published by the IEA and estimates of nitrous oxide and flaring related CO2 emissions, this new analysis shows that overall greenhouse gas emissions from energy rose to their highest ever level in 2021.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 2 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. Weather-related data useful to understand, analyse and model the energy sector. The IEA and CMCC Weather for Energy Tracker is a new free platform showcasing weather-related data useful to understand, analyse and model the energy sector, from generation to use across sectors. Data is available at the grid, country and sub-national levels, with a daily and monthly resolution from 2000 to the latest available month, and including monthly climatologies and anomalies.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. Quarterly Coal Statistics provide rapid, accurate and detailed statistics on production and trade of coal mainly in, but not limited to, the OECD area. Coal data are obtained from official national publications or from other official publications, or are estimated using reliable sources. Once a year, all quarterly data are revised to be consistent with the annual data from the Coal Information publication. The complete Quarterly Coal Statistics datasets are available from Q1 2016, and published in IVT format. IVT files must be opened in the Beyond 20/20 Browser software which can be downloaded at https://www.beyond2020.com/IEA/ProBrowser71.zip The complete Quarterly Coal Statistics datasets can also be accessed for free through the IEA Web Data Service by logging in as GUEST with the password GUEST.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. The goal of the Energy Efficiency Indicators is to illustrate what drives each country’s final energy use in order to track and improve national energy efficiency policies. The IEA has been collecting this comprehensive data since 2009 when its members recognised the need to improve their monitoring of energy efficiency policies. This data collection has progressively expanded to include non-IEA countries, and it covers end uses across the largest sectors – residential, services, industry and transport.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. This database presents the IEA’s country-by-country estimates of energy-related methane emissions. For the oil and gas sector, we present detailed estimates for the abatement potential – and costs or savings – from different technology and policy options.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. The Net Zero by 2050 dataset includes figures and tables from the publication along with projections at global level for the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario (NZE) based on detailed modelling of the energy sector. You can also read the full Net Zero by 2050 report, or explore specific indicators on our Net Zero by 2050 Data Browser.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • This dataset, updated monthly, provides electricity production and trade data for OECD Member Countries and electricity production data for a selection of other economies.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. A time series of fossil fuel consumption subsidy estimates from 2010, by country and fuel. This file also separates out the country-by-country estimates for subsidies to the transport sector. The IEA estimates subsidies to fossil fuels that are consumed directly by end-users or consumed as inputs to electricity generation.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. The IEA’s Energy Technology RD&D Budgets database allows users to track trends in spending by energy technology in IEA countries back to 1974. Data is collected from central or federal government budgets, as well as the budgets of state-owned companies, for spending on a range of sectors including energy efficiency, renewables, nuclear power, fossil fuels, hydrogen and fuel cells, and more. All figures refer to total public energy RD&D expenditure data, converted from current prices in national currencies to US dollar PPPs in constant prices.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. This free extract from Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Energy (previously called CO2 Emissions from Fuel Combustion) contains an extensive selection of Greenhouse gas emissions data from the energy sector for over 190 countries and regions. Emissions data are based on the World Energy Balances and on the 2006 IPCC Guidelines for Greenhouse Gas Inventories. With the objective to increase the scope and time range of greenhouse gas emissions estimates, the IEA has expanded the data included in this file with the following indicators: Energy related greenhouse gas emissions Fugitive greenhouse gas emissions Extended time series, starting in 1751 of CO2 emissions from fuel combustion.
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    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. _This free data set includes scenario and sectoral data from Energy Technology Perspectives 2017, as well as all the data behind the figures in the report._ _Use of this data is subject to the IEA's terms and conditions. You will need to enter into a Licence Agreement with the IEA and pay a fee if you wish to use the IEA’s data, including scenario data, in any type of modelling for the purpose of creating derived data or derived products, and any services to distribute or display such derived products._ _For example, you require a separate Licence Agreement to create metrics, alignment pathways, decarbonisation pathways and/or temperature scores at sector and/or company level in order to calculate and/or assess the climate compliance of investment portfolios and investment assets._ _If you intend to have such usage, please contact compliance@iea.org._ The global energy system is moving closer to a historic transformation. This year's edition of the IEA's comprehensive publication on energy technology focuses on the opportunities and challenges of scaling and accelerating the deployment of clean energy technologies. It looks at more ambitious scenarios than the IEA has produced before. Improvements in technology continue to modify the outlook for the energy sector, driving changes in business models, energy demand and supply patterns as well as regulatory approaches. Energy security, air quality, climate change and economic competitiveness are increasingly being factored in by decision makers. Energy Technology Perspectives 2017 (ETP 2017) details these trends as well as the technological advances that will shape energy security and environmental sustainability for decades to come. For the first time, ETP 2017 looks at how far clean energy technologies could move the energy sector towards higher climate change ambitions if technological innovations were pushed to their maximum practical limits. The analysis shows that, while policy support would be needed beyond anything seen to date, such a push could result in greenhouse gas emission levels that are consistent with the mid-point of the target temperature range of the global Paris Agreement on climate change. The analysis also indicates that regardless of the pathway chosen for the energy sector transformation, policy action is needed to ensure that multiple economic, security and other benefits to the accelerated deployment of clean energy technologies are realised through a systematic and co-ordinated approach.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. This report includes the latest monthly data on oil production for all OECD member countries, and imports, exports, refinery outputs, and net deliveries for major product categories for all OECD regions. It also includes total oil stock levels and stock changes for major product categories for all OECD member countries.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
  • The database is subject to the IEA’s Terms and Conditions, available at https://www.iea.org/terms. Historical time series on access to electricity and clean cooking (SDG 7.1) and progress towards SDG targets on renewables (SDG 7.2) and energy efficiency (SDG 7.3) This data set is updated as a part of the IEA’s role as co-custodian for tracking progress on Sustainable Development Goal 7. The other co-custodians include International Renewable Energy Agency, United Nations Statistics Division, the World Bank, and World Health Organisation.
    1
    Licence not specified
    almost 3 years ago
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