Data InsightsWhat is the largest source of electricity in each country?

What is the largest source of electricity in each country?

Choropleth world map of the largest source of electricity in 2024/25 by country, with country labels showing the share of generation coming from that largest source. The map shows many countries dominated by coal, gas, or hydropower, with notable examples labeled such as Norway at 90% hydropower, France about 69% nuclear, Chile about one-quarter solar, and Australia 43% coal. Data source: Ember (2026). License: CC BY.

Coal generates one-third of the world’s electricity, more than any other source.

But zoom into the country level, and the picture is much more varied. The map shows which source generated the most power in each country in 2024 or 2025 (the latest year available).

Thanks to large reserves, coal dominates across Asia. It’s the largest source in China, India, Indonesia, and Malaysia. These are huge power producers, which is why coal is so dominant at a global level.

Across most other regions, it’s mostly a mix of gas and hydropower. On islands and parts of North Africa, it’s oil.

Europe has the most diverse mix, with nuclear power dominating generation in countries such as France and Finland, and solar and wind overtaking fossil fuels as the largest sources in countries such as Spain and Germany.

Solar and wind are growing quickly in many countries; when these sources are combined as “variable renewables”, they become the largest source in six more countries: the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and Pakistan.

Explore the electricity mix across the world, and see how it’s changing over time

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