Household electricity consumption in Denmark declined from 39 petajoules in 2021 to 34 petajoules in 2022. That year, the final electricity consumption in the country amounted to over 110 petajoules.
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This table shows regional figures on the average consumption of energy (natural gas and electricity) of private dwellings broken down by type of dwelling and ownership for Nederland, group of provinces, provinces and municipalities. Besides, for total dwellings only, the share of heat distribution (district heating) has been added, because this is relevant for the interpretation of the height of the average consumption of natural gas.
Data available from: 2010
Status of the figures: All figures from 2010 - 2021 are definite. Figures of 2022 are provisional.
Changes as of October 2023: Provisional figures of 2022 have been added. Figures of 2021 have been updated. The category “Average consumption of electricity” is replaced by “Average supply of electricity” and a category “Average net supply of electricity” has been added.
When will new figures be published? A revision to the method of this statistic is currently underway, causing the table to be delayed. New figures will come in the 3rd quarter of the folowing year.
In 2023, the final electricity consumption of households in Sweden amounted to nearly ** terawatt-hours. The household type which had the highest consumption was small houses, with more than **** terawatt-hours recorded that year. Meanwhile, holiday houses accounted for just over ** percent of the household electricity consumption in Sweden.
Residential customers use an average of about 1,000 kWh of electricity per month, with usage higher during hot summer months and lower in the winter. View tables show monthly average usage in kWh by month for residential customers starting in 2000. Tables include monthly fuel charges and electric bill amounts.
Electricity consumption in the United States totaled ***** terawatt-hours in 2023, one of the highest values in the period under consideration. Figures represent energy end use, which is the sum of retail sales and direct use of electricity by the producing entity. Electricity consumption in the U.S. is expected to continue increasing in the next decades. Which sectors consume the most electricity in the U.S.? Consumption has often been associated with economic growth. Nevertheless, technological improvements in efficiency and new appliance standards have led to a stabilizing of electricity consumption, despite the increased ubiquity of chargeable consumer electronics. Electricity consumption is highest in the residential sector, followed by the commercial sector. Equipment used for space heating and cooling account for some of the largest shares of residential electricity end use. Leading states in electricity use Industrial hub Texas is the leading electricity-consuming U.S. state. In 2022, the Southwestern state, which houses major refinery complexes and is also home to nearly ** million people, consumed over *** terawatt-hours. California and Florida trailed in second and third, each with an annual consumption of approximately *** terawatt-hours.
Detailed household load and solar generation in minutely to hourly resolution. This data package contains measured time series data for several small businesses and residential households relevant for household- or low-voltage-level power system modeling. The data includes solar power generation as well as electricity consumption (load) in a resolution up to single device consumption. The starting point for the time series, as well as data quality, varies between households, with gaps spanning from a few minutes to entire days. All measurement devices provided cumulative energy consumption/generation over time. Hence overall energy consumption/generation is retained, in case of data gaps due to communication problems. Measurements were conducted 1-minute intervals, with all data made available in an interpolated, uniform and regular time interval. All data gaps are either interpolated linearly, or filled with data of prior days. Additionally, data in 15 and 60-minute resolution is provided for compatibility with other time series data. Data processing is conducted in Jupyter Notebooks/Python/pandas.
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Iran Electricity Consumption: Household data was reported at 18,339.000 kWh mn in Jun 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 16,260.000 kWh mn for Mar 2018. Iran Electricity Consumption: Household data is updated quarterly, averaging 15,589.000 kWh mn from Jun 2008 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 41 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 28,016.100 kWh mn in Sep 2017 and a record low of 12,262.000 kWh mn in Mar 2012. Iran Electricity Consumption: Household data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Ministry of Energy. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Iran – Table IR.RB002: Electricity Generation and Consumption.
https://data.gov.sg/open-data-licencehttps://data.gov.sg/open-data-licence
Dataset from Energy Market Authority. For more information, visit https://data.gov.sg/datasets/d_90009364978a4acd3132be18b4d23be2/view
Over the past half a century, the world's electricity consumption has continuously grown, reaching approximately 27,000 terawatt-hours by 2023. Between 1980 and 2023, electricity consumption more than tripled, while the global population reached eight billion people. Growth in industrialization and electricity access across the globe have further boosted electricity demand. China's economic rise and growth in global power use Since 2000, China's GDP has recorded an astonishing 15-fold increase, turning it into the second-largest global economy, behind only the United States. To fuel the development of its billion-strong population and various manufacturing industries, China requires more energy than any other country. As a result, it has become the largest electricity consumer in the world. Electricity consumption per capita In terms of per capita electricity consumption, China and other BRIC countries are still vastly outpaced by developed economies with smaller population sizes. Iceland, with a population of less than half a million inhabitants, consumes by far the most electricity per person in the world. Norway, Qatar, Canada, and the United States also have among the highest consumption rates. Multiple contributing factors such as the existence of power-intensive industries, household sizes, living situations, appliance and efficiency standards, and access to alternative heating fuels determine the amount of electricity the average person requires in each country.
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CN: Electricity Consumption: per Capita: Residential: Average data was reported at 987.000 kWh in 2022. This records an increase from the previous number of 869.000 kWh for 2021. CN: Electricity Consumption: per Capita: Residential: Average data is updated yearly, averaging 126.527 kWh from Dec 1980 (Median) to 2022, with 43 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 987.000 kWh in 2022 and a record low of 10.721 kWh in 1980. CN: Electricity Consumption: per Capita: Residential: Average data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under China Premium Database’s Energy Sector – Table CN.RBB: Electricity Consumption per Capita.
This table contains 1155 series, with data for years 2011-2019 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (11 items: Canada; Newfoundland and Labrador; Prince Edward Island; Nova Scotia; ...); Type of dwelling (7 items: Single-detached; Double; Row or terrace; Duplex; ...); Energy type (4 items: Total, all energy types; Electricity; Natural gas; Heating oil); Energy consumption (4 items: Gigajoules; Gigajoules per household; Proportion of total energy; Number of households).
These statistics include the following estimates at the region and local authority levels in Great Britain, for domestic, non-domestic and total electricity consumption:
The subnational electricity consumption statistics gained National Statistics status in March 2008. This status applies to all data from 2005 onwards. The 2003 and 2004 data are still classed as experimental. Electricity consumption statistics for 2003 to 2004 (experimental), and 2005 to 2023 (National Statistics) are available.
For more information on regional and local authority data, please contact:
Energy consumption and regional statistics team
Department for Energy Security and Net Zero
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Forecast: Average per Capita Electricity Consumption of Households in China 2022 - 2026 Discover more data with ReportLinker!
The data provided correspond to the average hourly consumption of the main electrical appliances in dwellings (Wh/h); in other words, monitoring the average hour-by-hour consumption of these devices. Depending on the equipment, consumption is calculated for the year and different seasonalities. These data correspond to exercise 1 of the Panel Elecdom project (April 2019-April 2020). ## The Elecdom Panel The overall objective of the PANEL ELECDOM project is to improve knowledge of electricity consumption in the residential sector, which, with 33% of French electricity consumption in 2017, is the most consuming sector. This study focuses on the specific uses of electricity. Based on information collected in the field, this research system, which is unique in France, is intended to continue with the aim of dynamically assessing the impact of societal changes and consumption patterns (products, behaviour). A communication system records, at a time step of 10 minutes in 100 housing units representative of the French stock, the electricity consumption of the appliances connected to the power outlets and those of the electrical outlets on the switchboard. The data is then sent daily to an ftp server. Each dwelling is equipped with an average of 24.8 measuring points. For more information Reuse * How much electricity do we consume and how to reduce our bills? Le Monde: published on 06 October 2022 at 12.20, updated on 26 January 2023 at 15.22 (republication of the article on 25 September 2022 at 06.00)
In 2023, the value of electricity consumption per household in Thailand amounted to *** Thai baht. In that year, the total energy consumption per household in the country reached almost ***** Thai baht.
https://spdx.org/licenses/etalab-2.0.htmlhttps://spdx.org/licenses/etalab-2.0.html
This is grouped and aggregated electricity consumption data from the EtudELEC study conducted by the Observatoire du Transition Energétique Grenoble (OTE-UGA). If you find this dataset useful and like different groupings to be published or have any questions, please feel free to comment on the discussion dedicated to this dataset on the OTE forum . The EtudELEC study only studies electricity consumption from residential dwellings around France. The study involved over 400 homes (individual houses and apartments) and spanned ~11 months from 25th October 2022 to 1st October 2023. The data is collected from the smart meter data (Linky data) which is only available with a time-step of 30 minutes. The data is in average watts consumed in a half-hour period. For reasons for privacy in line with GDPR laws, personal data such as individual home consumption will be shared as aggregated datasets as opposed to individual data points. The data from the participants were aggregated based on the following groupings: - Type of heating used and type of residence (stand-alone house vs apartment) This dataset is best viewed in the "Tree" view below. A folder is created for each of the groupings and sub-folders exist for all the subsequent groups. Each group folder contains: - a table of the minimum, mean, and maximum of the average power consumed for each 30-minute period (W), and - a JSON file with aggregated demographics information (number of inhabitants in different age backets, socio-professional category, year of construction etc.) of the group The datasets will be updated on a yearly basis following the renewal of consent of the panel members. Il s'agit de données de consommation électriques groupées et agrégées issues de l'étude EtudELEC menée par l'Observatoire de la Transition Energétique (OTE-UGA). Si vous trouvez ce jeu de données utile et souhaitez que différents regroupements soient publiés, n'hésitez pas à écrire dans le topic sur le forum OTE. L'étude EtudELEC est une étude sur la consommation d'électricité des logements résidentiels en France. L'étude porte sur plus de 400 logements (maisons individuelles et appartements) et s'étend sur 11 mois du 25 octobre 2022 au 1 octobre 2023. Les données sont collectées à partir des données des compteurs intelligents (données Linky) qui ne sont disponibles qu'avec un pas de temps de 30 minutes. Les données sont exprimées en watts consommés en moyenne sur une période d'une demi-heure. Pour des raisons de confidentialité conformes aux lois RGPD, les données personnelles telles que la consommation individuelle des maisons seront partagées sous forme d'ensembles de données agrégées plutôt que de points de données individuels. Les données des participants ont été agrégées sur la base des regroupements suivants : - Type de chauffage utilisé et type de résidence (maison individuelle ou appartement). Cet ensemble de données est mieux visualisé dans l'arborescence ci-dessous. Un dossier est créé pour chaque groupe et des sous-dossiers existent pour tous les groupes suivants. Chaque dossier de groupe contient : - un tableau du minimum, de la moyenne et du maximum de la puissance moyenne consommée pour chaque période de 30 minutes (W), et - un fichier JSON avec des informations démographiques agrégées (nombre d'habitants dans différentes tranches d'âge, catégorie socioprofessionnelle, année de construction, etc. Les jeux de données seront mis à jour chaque année après le renouvellement du consentement des membres du panel.
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.htmlhttp://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html
The general objective of this dataset is to improve knowledge relating to electricity consumption in the residential sector which, with 33% of French electricity consumption in 2017, is the most consuming sector.
This study focuses more particularly on the specific uses of electricity. Based on information collected in the field, this unique research system in France is intended to continue with the aim of dynamically evaluating the impact of societal developments and consumption patterns (products, behaviors).
A communicating system records, at a time interval of 10 minutes in 100 housing units representative of the French stock, the electricity consumption of the devices connected to the power outlets and that of the electrical outlets on the panel. The data is then sent daily to an FTP server. Each home is equipped with an average of 24.8 measurement points.
The proposed dataset presents the annual consumption data of the different devices monitored, given in kWh/year. When the measurement period is not complete, the data has been annualized using linear extrapolation.
Would you be able to predict the consumption of your house with this dataset ?
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Nigeria Electricity Consumption: Average per Hour data was reported at 4,105.660 MWh in Dec 2024. This records an increase from the previous number of 4,000.240 MWh for Sep 2024. Nigeria Electricity Consumption: Average per Hour data is updated quarterly, averaging 2,976.960 MWh from Mar 2005 (Median) to Dec 2024, with 79 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 4,456.000 MWh in Sep 2015 and a record low of 1,300.000 MWh in Jun 2008. Nigeria Electricity Consumption: Average per Hour data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Central Bank of Nigeria. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Nigeria – Table NG.RB002: Electricity Generation and Consumption.
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Hong Kong Electricity Consumption: CLP Power: Per Person data was reported at 5,397.000 kWh/Person mn in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 5,451.000 kWh/Person mn for 2016. Hong Kong Electricity Consumption: CLP Power: Per Person data is updated yearly, averaging 5,072.000 kWh/Person mn from Dec 1989 (Median) to 2017, with 29 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 5,516.000 kWh/Person mn in 2014 and a record low of 3,618.000 kWh/Person mn in 1989. Hong Kong Electricity Consumption: CLP Power: Per Person data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by CLP Power Hong Kong Limited. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Hong Kong SAR – Table HK.RB001: Electricity Production & Consumption.
In 2023, German five-person households in detached houses with electric water heating consumed around ***** kilowatt hours of electricity a year, on average. Apartment buildings with the same system consumed ***** kilowatt hours.
Household electricity consumption in Denmark declined from 39 petajoules in 2021 to 34 petajoules in 2022. That year, the final electricity consumption in the country amounted to over 110 petajoules.