Of the leading ten technology companies worldwide based on market capitalization, Samsung is the company consuming the most electricity at nearly ** million megawatt-hours (MWh) based on the company's most recent 2023 figures. Google, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), and Microsoft came in second, third, and fourth place in electricity consumption, respectively.
Electricity use in data centers run by Google and Microsoft accounted for ** terawatt hours in 2023, greater than that of the country of Jordan. The training of AI models has heavily contributed to an increase in energy requirements, leading a number of big tech companies to consume more energy than countries.
Success.ai’s Energy Consumption Data for European Energy Companies provides valuable insights into the operational landscapes of energy firms across Europe. Drawing from over 30 million verified company profiles, this dataset includes detailed information on energy consumption patterns, firmographic attributes, and decision-maker contacts within the European energy sector. Whether you are introducing smart grid technologies, offering renewable energy solutions, or analyzing regional consumption trends, Success.ai ensures that your strategic initiatives are informed by accurate, continuously updated, and AI-validated data.
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This table contains figures on the supply and consumption of energy broken down by sector and by energy commodity. The energy supply is equal to the indigenous production of energy plus the receipts minus the deliveries of energy plus the stock changes. Consumption of energy is equal to the sum of own use, distribution losses, final energy consumption, non-energy use and the total net energy transformation. For each sector, the supply of energy is equal to the consumption of energy.
For some energy commodities, the total of the observed domestic deliveries is not exactly equal to the sum of the observed domestic receipts. For these energy commodities, a statistical difference arises that can not be attributed to a sector.
The breakdown into sectors follows mainly the classification as is customary in international energy statistics. This classification is based on functions of various sectors in the energy system and for several break downs on the international Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). There are two main sectors: the energy sector (companies with main activity indigenous production or transformation of energy) and energy consumers (other companies, vehicles and dwellings). In addition to a breakdown by sector, there is also a breakdown by energy commodity, such as coal, various petroleum products, natural gas, renewable energy, electricity and heat and other energy commodities like non renewable waste.
The definitions used in this table are exactly in line with the definitions in the Energy Balance table; supply, transformation and consumption. That table does not contain a breakdown by sector (excluding final energy consumption), but it does provide information about imports, exports and bunkering and also provides more detail about the energy commodities.
Data available: From: 1990.
Status of the figures: Figures up to and including 2022 are definite. Figures for 2023 and 2024 are revised provisional.
Changes as of July 2025: Compiling figures on solar electricity took more time than scheduled. Consequently, not all StatLine tables on energy contain the most recent 2024 data on production for solar electricity. This table contains the outdated data from June 2025. The most recent figures are 5 percent higher for 2024 solar electricity production. These figures are in these two tables (in Dutch): - StatLine - Zonnestroom; vermogen en vermogensklasse, bedrijven en woningen, regio - StatLine - Hernieuwbare energie; zonnestroom, windenergie, RES-regio Next update is scheduled in November 2025. From that moment all figures will be fully consistent again. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Changes as of June 2025: Figures for 2024 have been updated.
Changes as of March 17th 2025: For all reporting years the underlying code for 'Total crudes, fossil fraction' and 'Total kerosene, fossiel fraction' is adjusted. Figures have not been changed.
Changes as of November 15th 2024: The structure of the table has been adjusted. The adjustment concerns the division into sectors, with the aluminum industry now being distinguished separately within the non-ferrous metal sector. This table has also been revised for 2015 to 2021 as a result of new methods that have also been applied for 2022 and 2023. This concerns the following components: final energy consumption of LPG, distribution of final energy consumption of motor gasoline, sector classification of gas oil/diesel within the services and transfer of energy consumption of the nuclear industry from industry to the energy sector. The natural gas consumption of the wood and wood products industry has also been improved so that it is more comparable over time. This concerns changes of a maximum of a few PJ.
Changes as of June 7th 2024: Revised provisional figures of 2023 have been added.
Changes as of April 26th of 2024 The energy balance has been revised for 2015 and later on a limited number of points. The most important is the following: 1. For solid biomass and municipal waste, the most recent data have been included. Furthermore data were affected by integration with figures for a new, yet to be published StatLine table on the supply of solid biomass. As a result, there are some changes in receipts of energy, deliveries of energy and indigenous production of biomass of a maximum of a few PJ. 2. In the case of natural gas, an improvement has been made in the processing of data for stored LNG, which causes a shift between stock changes, receipts of energy and deliveries of energy of a maximum of a few PJ.
Changes as of March 25th of 2024: The energy balance has been revised and restructured. This concerns mainly the following: 1. Different way of dealing with biofuels that have been mixed with fossil fuels 2. A breakdown of the natural gas balance of agriculture into greenhouse horticulture and other agriculture. 3. Final consumption of electricity in services
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Electricity Consumption: Miaoli County data was reported at 7,237,807.494 kWh th in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 7,141,648.317 kWh th for 2016. Electricity Consumption: Miaoli County data is updated yearly, averaging 6,049,371.593 kWh th from Dec 1998 (Median) to 2017, with 20 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 7,237,807.494 kWh th in 2017 and a record low of 4,041,000.000 kWh th in 1999. Electricity Consumption: Miaoli County data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Taiwan Power Company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Taiwan – Table TW.RB008: Energy Consumption: Electricity: By Region: Taiwan Power Company (Annual).
vitaliy-sharandin/energy-consumption-weather-hourly-spain dataset hosted on Hugging Face and contributed by the HF Datasets community
In financial year 2023, TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) had the highest energy consumption among the leading IT companies across India. The energy consumption of the company stood at around *** petajoules. In comparison, the energy consumption of Tech Mahindra was around *** terajoules in the same period.
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EC: EP: FI: IC: Personal Insurance data was reported at 183,158.837 kWh th in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 187,958.719 kWh th for 2016. EC: EP: FI: IC: Personal Insurance data is updated yearly, averaging 194,331.696 kWh th from Dec 1998 (Median) to 2017, with 20 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 207,734.325 kWh th in 2006 and a record low of 159,296.765 kWh th in 1998. EC: EP: FI: IC: Personal Insurance data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Taiwan Power Company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Taiwan – Table TW.RB007: Energy Consumption: Electricity: By Industry: Taiwan Power Company (Annual).
The data package provides average residential, commercial, and industrial electricity rates by zip code for both investor-owned utilities (IOU) and non-investor owned utilities. The datasets include information such as peak load, generation, electric purchases, sales, revenues, customer counts and demand-side management programs, green pricing and net metering programs, and distributed generation capacity.
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Electricity Consumption: Fuchien Province (FP) data was reported at 365,291.634 kWh th in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 359,768.039 kWh th for 2016. Electricity Consumption: Fuchien Province (FP) data is updated yearly, averaging 289,456.711 kWh th from Dec 1998 (Median) to 2017, with 20 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 365,291.634 kWh th in 2017 and a record low of 185,000.000 kWh th in 1998. Electricity Consumption: Fuchien Province (FP) data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Taiwan Power Company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Taiwan – Table TW.RB007: Energy Consumption: Electricity: By Region: Taiwan Power Company (Annual).
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EC: EP: MFG: EE: Lighting Equipment data was reported at 103,243.642 kWh th in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 107,734.118 kWh th for 2016. EC: EP: MFG: EE: Lighting Equipment data is updated yearly, averaging 123,747.888 kWh th from Dec 1998 (Median) to 2017, with 20 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 205,284.040 kWh th in 2007 and a record low of 89,554.317 kWh th in 2011. EC: EP: MFG: EE: Lighting Equipment data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Taiwan Power Company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Taiwan – Table TW.RB007: Energy Consumption: Electricity: By Industry: Taiwan Power Company (Annual).
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LLM Inference Energy Consumption Dataset
Overview
Welcome to the LM Inference Energy Consumption dataset repository. This dataset provides detailed energy consumption profiles for various large language models (LLMs) across diverse hardware setups. It aims to support research on energy efficiency and sustainability in AI.
Datasheet: LLM Inference Energy Consumption
Introduction
This document is a datasheet detailing the motivation, composition… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/ejhusom/llm-inference-energy-consumption.
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EC: EP: MFG: EE: Audio & Video Electronic Products data was reported at 438,183.885 kWh th in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 502,745.625 kWh th for 2016. EC: EP: MFG: EE: Audio & Video Electronic Products data is updated yearly, averaging 390,918.314 kWh th from Dec 1998 (Median) to 2017, with 20 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 606,212.292 kWh th in 2014 and a record low of 140,741.422 kWh th in 1998. EC: EP: MFG: EE: Audio & Video Electronic Products data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Taiwan Power Company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Taiwan – Table TW.RB007: Energy Consumption: Electricity: By Industry: Taiwan Power Company (Annual).
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Jordan Electricity Consumption: Commercial and Hotel data was reported at 2,509.800 GWh in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 2,415.700 GWh for 2016. Jordan Electricity Consumption: Commercial and Hotel data is updated yearly, averaging 842.500 GWh from Dec 1980 (Median) to 2017, with 34 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 2,509.800 GWh in 2017 and a record low of 107.000 GWh in 1980. Jordan Electricity Consumption: Commercial and Hotel data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Electric Power company. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Jordan – Table JO.RB002: Energy Consumption.
Data includes consumption for a range of property characteristics such as age and type, as well as a range of household characteristics such as the number of adults and household income.
The content covers:
We identified 4 processing errors in this edition of the Domestic NEED Annual report and corrected them. The changes are small and do not affect the overall findings of the report, only the domestic energy consumption estimates. The impact of energy efficiency measures analysis remains unchanged. The revisions are summarised on the Domestic NEED Report 2021 release page.
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Electricity Consumption: Own Consumption data was reported at 44,528.460 MWh in Mar 2025. This records an increase from the previous number of 40,734.150 MWh for Feb 2025. Electricity Consumption: Own Consumption data is updated monthly, averaging 40,424.470 MWh from Jan 2003 (Median) to Mar 2025, with 267 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 98,951.330 MWh in Feb 2023 and a record low of 28,019.340 MWh in Jan 2010. Electricity Consumption: Own Consumption data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Electric Energy Agency. The data is categorized under Brazil Premium Database’s Energy Sector – Table BR.RBC034: Electricity Consumption: Own Consumption: by Company.
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This table expresses the use of renewable energy as gross final consumption of energy. Figures are presented in an absolute way, as well as related to the total energy use in the Netherlands. The total gross final energy consumption in the Netherlands (the denominator used to calculate the percentage of renewable energy per ‘Energy sources and techniques’) can be found in the table as ‘Total, including non-renewables’ and Energy application ‘Total’. The gross final energy consumption for the energy applications ‘Electricity’ and ‘Heat’ are also available. With these figures the percentages of the different energy sources and applications can be calculated; these values are not available in this table. The gross final energy consumption for ‘Transport’ is not available because of the complexity to calculate this. More information on this can be found in the yearly publication ‘Hernieuwbare energie in Nederland’.
Renewable energy is energy from wind, hydro power, the sun, the earth, heat from outdoor air and biomass. This is energy from natural processes that is replenished constantly.
The figures are broken down into energy source/technique and into energy application (electricity, heat and transport).
This table focuses on the share of renewable energy according to the EU Renewable Energy Directive. Under this directive, countries can apply an administrative transfer by purchasing renewable energy from countries that have consumed more renewable energy than the agreed target. For 2020, the Netherlands has implemented such a transfer by purchasing renewable energy from Denmark. This transfer has been made visible in this table as a separate energy source/technique and two totals are included; a total with statistical transfer and a total without statistical transfer.
Figures for 2020 and before were calculated based on RED I; in accordance with Eurostat these figures will not be modified anymore. Inconsistencies with other tables undergoing updates may occur.
Data available from: 1990
Status of the figures: This table contains definite figures up to and including 2022, figures for 2023 are revised provisional figures and figures for 2024 are provisional.
Changes as of July 2025: Compiling figures on solar electricity took more time than scheduled. Consequently, not all StatLine tables on energy contain the most recent 2024 data on production for solar electricity. This table contains the outdated data from June 2025. The most recent figures are 5 percent higher for 2024 solar electricity production. These figures are in these two tables (in Dutch): - StatLine - Zonnestroom; vermogen en vermogensklasse, bedrijven en woningen, regio - StatLine - Hernieuwbare energie; zonnestroom, windenergie, RES-regio Next update is scheduled in November 2025. From that moment all figures will be fully consistent again. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Changes as of june 2025: Figures for 2024 have been added.
Changes as of January 2025
Renewable cooling has been added as Energy source and technique from 2021 onwards, in accordance with RED II. Figures for 2020 and earlier follow RED I definitions, renewable cooling isn’t a part of these definitions.
The energy application “Heat” has been renamed to “Heating and cooling”, in accordance with RED II definitions.
RED II is the current Renewable Energy Directive which entered into force in 2021
Changes as of November 15th 2024 Figures for 2021-2023 have been adjusted. 2022 is now definitive, 2023 stays revised provisional. Because of new insights for windmills regarding own electricity use and capacity, figures on 2021 have been revised.
Changes as of March 2024: Figures of the total energy applications of biogas, co-digestion of manure and other biogas have been restored for 2021 and 2022. The final energy consumption of non-compliant biogas (according to RED II) was wrongly included in the total final consumption of these types of biogas. Figures of total biogas, total biomass and total renewable energy were not influenced by this and therefore not adjusted.
When will new figures be published? Provisional figures on the gross final consumption of renewable energy in broad outlines for the previous year are published each year in June. Revised provisional figures for the previous year appear each year in June.
In November all figures on the consumption of renewable energy in the previous year will be published. These figures remain revised provisional, definite figures appear in November two years after the reporting year. Most important (expected) changes between revised provisional figures in November and definite figures a year later are the figures on solar photovoltaic energy. The figures on the share of total energy consumption in the Netherlands could also still be changed by the availability of adjusted figures on total energy consumption.
This dataset contains the electric power consumption of 28 German companies in 15 minutes resolution. The data was adjusted for inconsistencies in the daylight saving time transitions. Other inconsistencies and errors were not eliminated. The data were collected by power utilities for billing purposes and covers the years 2014 and 2018. The companies provided the data to the C/sells the project. The authors want to thank Wolff and Müller Energy for providing the data. Further, the Germany Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy for funding and support. This research was partly financed by the Smart Energy Showcases - Digital Agenda for the Energy Transition (SINTEG) program. All values are mean power values in kW in the 15 minute intervals. Open CSV data with any editor.
Energy consumption at City facilities. This raw data is subject to periodic adjustments and modifications.
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
This dataset provides monthly electricity consumption data for Taiwan Power Company's customers by industry over the past 5 years, to help people understand the electricity consumption of each industry.
Of the leading ten technology companies worldwide based on market capitalization, Samsung is the company consuming the most electricity at nearly ** million megawatt-hours (MWh) based on the company's most recent 2023 figures. Google, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), and Microsoft came in second, third, and fourth place in electricity consumption, respectively.