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Shedding light on energy in the EU - A guided tour of energy statistics is a digital publication released by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union.

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The dedicated section on energy on the Eurostat website.

Articles on energy in Statistics Explained.

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Date of data extraction: August 2016 for text and all infographics, maps and animations. The Sankey diagram is continuously updated.

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If you have questions on the data, please contact the Eurostat User Support.

Identifiers of the digital publication:

Catalogue number: KS-01-16-784-EN-Q
ISBN 978-92-79-59528-8
Doi: 10.2785/84924

© European Union, 2016
Cover photo: © Shutterstock - copyright Capitanoseye - Image number: 315873152
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What kind of energy do we consume in the EU?

Out of the total energy available in the EU, just under two thirds is consumed by end users, for example EU citizens, industry, transport etc.. The difference – around one third – is mainly used for electricity generation and in other energy transformation processes. An example of a transformation process is crude oil being refined at refineries to become petroleum products.

To properly interpret energy statistics, it is necessary to distinguish between primary and secondary energy products. A primary energy product is extracted or captured directly from natural resources, such as crude oil, firewood, natural gas or coal. Secondary energy products (such as electricity or motor gasoline) are produced as a result of a transformation process, either from a primary or from a different secondary energy product.

Flow of energy products from production to final consumption




Petroleum products are the most consumed

In the EU in 2014, petroleum products (such as heating oil, petrol, diesel fuel), which represent 40 % of final energy consumption were the most consumed, followed by electricity and natural gas (22 % each), direct use of renewables (not transformed into electricity, e.g. wood, solar thermal, geothermal or biogas for space heating or hot water production) (8 %), solid fossil fuels (mostly coal) and derived heat (such as district heating) (4 % each). The real consumption of renewable energy is higher than 8 %, because other renewable sources are included in electricity (e.g. hydropower, wind power or solar photovoltaic).

Within the EU Member States, the final energy consumption pattern varies considerably. Petroleum products reach over 65 % of final energy consumption in Cyprus, Luxembourg and Malta, while gas accounts for over 30 % in the Netherlands, Hungary and Slovakia. Renewable energies reach over 20 % in Latvia and Finland, while the consumption of electricity in Sweden and Malta accounts for over 30 % of their final energy consumption.


The transport sector consumes a third of the final energy consumption in the EU

Energy is consumed by different sectors of the economy: households (i.e. energy consumed in the residential sector), transport (e.g. rail, road, domestic aviation or inland shipping), industry, services (including commercial and public services) and agriculture & forestry.

Looking at which sectors in the EU consume the most energy, the transport sector (33 % of final energy consumption) consumes the most energy, followed by industry (26 %), households (25 %), services (13 %) and agriculture & forestry (2 %).

share of energy products in total final energy consumption