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<title>Our World in Data - Data Insights</title>
<subtitle>Bite-sized insights on how the world is changing, written by our team</subtitle>
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<updated>2026-06-06T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[What is the largest source of electricity in each country?]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/what-is-the-largest-source-of-electricity-in-each-country</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/what-is-the-largest-source-of-electricity-in-each-country"/>
            <published>2026-06-06T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-01T08:13:30.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/e7e35236-283c-4087-0c26-ed33eb812f00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/e7e35236-283c-4087-0c26-ed33eb812f00/w=1350" alt="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." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Coal </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-elec-by-source" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">generates one-third</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> of the world’s electricity, more than any other source.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">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).</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">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.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Across most other regions, it’s mostly a mix of gas and hydropower. On islands and parts of North Africa, it’s oil.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">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.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">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.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-elec-by-source" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore the electricity mix across the world, and see how it’s changing over time</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Australia is replacing coal and gas power with solar and wind]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/australia-is-replacing-coal-and-gas-power-with-solar-and-wind</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/australia-is-replacing-coal-and-gas-power-with-solar-and-wind"/>
            <published>2026-06-04T06:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-04T06:00:32.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/b2dd34e9-80e6-4bb1-a32c-65a7e8892c00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/b2dd34e9-80e6-4bb1-a32c-65a7e8892c00/w=1350" alt="Line chart of the share of electricity produced by each source in Australia from 1985 to 2025 where coal falls from over 80% to under 50% over about 25 years, gas rises in the 2000s and early 2010s, and solar and wind grow rapidly in the last decade with solar overtaking gas in 2023. Source: Ember (2026); Energy Institute (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">At the turn of the millennium, Australia got more than 80% of its electricity from coal. This has dropped to less than 45%.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The chart shows how the country’s electricity mix has changed in recent decades.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In the 2000s and early 2010s, coal was initially replaced by gas, with only moderate growth in solar and wind. But in the last five years, solar and wind have been deployed much more quickly. Gas is now on the decline, too. In 2023, solar overtook gas to become Australia’s second-largest electricity source.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">While coal is declining, it still supplies </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/energy?facet=none&amp;Total+or+Breakdown=Select+a+source&amp;Energy+or+Electricity=Electricity+only&amp;Metric=Share+of+total&amp;Select+a+source=Coal&amp;country=~AUS" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">much more of Australia’s power</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> than most high-income countries.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-elec-by-source" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore how electricity sources are changing in other countries</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Less than 60% of the world has access to safe sanitation]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/less-than-60-of-the-world-has-access-to-safe-sanitation</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/less-than-60-of-the-world-has-access-to-safe-sanitation"/>
            <published>2026-06-02T05:37:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-02T05:37:19.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/73ae8170-0fea-44f5-00c1-336d3716b500/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/73ae8170-0fea-44f5-00c1-336d3716b500/w=1350" alt="Line chart of the share of the population using improved, non-shared sanitation facilities with safely disposed excreta from 2000 to 2024 where it highlights global improvement but persistent gaps between income groups. High-income countries remain around 70 to 85 percent, the world average rises from about 30 to 60 percent, and low-income countries stay much lower around 10 to 25 percent. Data source: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Unsafe sanitation is responsible for </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-deaths-by-risk-factor" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">hundreds of thousands of deaths</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> each year. It increases the risk of many fatal diseases, including cholera, diarrhea, dysentery, hepatitis A, typhoid, and polio.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Unfortunately, over 40% of the world does not have access to safe sanitation facilities. This is based on estimates from the WHO/UNICEF’s </span><a href="https://washdata.org/data/household#!/" class="span-link"><span class="">Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene</span></a><span class="">.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The chart shows the share of the global population that has access to safe sanitation over time. While rates have increased, particularly over the last decade, they still fall far short of the UN’s target of universal access in 2030.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Increasing access to safe sanitation would save many lives from preventable infectious diseases.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-using-safely-managed-sanitation" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore data on safely managed sanitation for individual countries and regions.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Lung cancer deaths trace the rise and fall of smoking]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/lung-cancer-deaths-trace-the-rise-and-fall-of-smoking</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/lung-cancer-deaths-trace-the-rise-and-fall-of-smoking"/>
            <published>2026-05-30T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-27T20:03:05.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/0d86a4ca-78aa-4416-683c-1c0e54c8f300/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/0d86a4ca-78aa-4416-683c-1c0e54c8f300/w=1350" alt="Small multiple line charts of reported male deaths from trachea, bronchus, and lung cancers per 100,000 men for six countries from 1950 to 2023, where each country shows a rise to a mid-to-late 20th-century peak followed by a decline to 2023, with the United Kingdom and Netherlands peaking highest and Japan and France showing later, lower peaks. Source: WHO Mortality Database (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Lung cancer kills more than two million people every year, making it the </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/cancer-deaths-by-type-grouped" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">most fatal cancer</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> globally.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">While a number of factors increase the risk, the 20th century brought one like no other: smoking.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">There is now plenty of epidemiological evidence </span><a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/0022034511421200" class="span-link"><span class="">linking smoking</span></a><span class=""> to lung cancer, but we can also see it in the patterns of death over decades. The chart shows death rates from lung, trachea, and bronchus cancers among men in a selection of high-income countries. Each shows a very clear rise and fall over the late 20th century.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">This pattern mirrors smoking rates, with a lag. The timing and height of each peak depend on when and how strongly smoking took hold: </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/sales-of-cigarettes-per-adult-per-day?tab=line&amp;country=GBR~JPN" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">early in the United Kingdom, later in Japan</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">You also see this rise and fall among women, </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/lung-cancer-deaths-per-100000-by-sex-1950-2002" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">shifted later</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">, since they took up smoking after men did.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Today, most smokers live in low- and middle-income countries, who are at different stages of this curve. Helping people quit or preventing them from starting in the first place would save many lives for decades to come.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/smoking-big-problem-in-brief" class="span-link"><span class="">Read my colleague Max Roser’s article: “Smoking: How large of a global problem is it? And how can we make progress against it?”</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Most collected waste in many low- and middle-income countries is stored in open dumps or is burned]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/most-collected-waste-in-many-low--and-middle-income-countries-is-stored-in-open-dumps-or-is-burned</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/most-collected-waste-in-many-low--and-middle-income-countries-is-stored-in-open-dumps-or-is-burned"/>
            <published>2026-05-28T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-27T20:01:26.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Veronika Samborska</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/bbd3bc29-2c15-4115-33c9-7c27cd639600/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/bbd3bc29-2c15-4115-33c9-7c27cd639600/w=1350" alt="Stacked horizontal bar chart of the share of collected municipal waste, by mass, in selected countries where it compares proportions managed in open dumps, open burning, and by controlled landfills/composting/incineration/recycling. It shows many low- and middle-income countries (Sri Lanka, Uganda, India, Nigeria) record most collected waste in open dumps or burned, while higher-income countries (UK, USA, France) manage nearly all collected waste through controlled methods. Data source: Anshassi and Townsend (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Effective waste management systems are something that many of us living in high-income countries take for granted. Our waste is collected from bins in our street and taken to controlled or sanitary landfills, incinerators, or recycling centers.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But in many low- and middle-income countries, this is not the case.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In some of them, less than half of the waste (from households, shops, and other sources) </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-waste-collected" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">is collected</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> by management services at all.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In many countries, even when waste is collected, </span><a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-025-01607-8" class="span-link"><span class="">most of it</span></a><span class=""> — sometimes over 80% — is taken to open dumps or is openly burned. You can see this in the chart.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Both methods cause pollution, either through waste leaking from open dumps or toxic air pollution generated when plastics and other materials are burned.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">While these numbers show that huge amounts of the world’s waste are mismanaged, they also tell a story of opportunity. Countries that invest in waste management can do so effectively, so that very </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/plastic-waste-vs-pollution" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">little waste</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> pollutes the environment, and the air is </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/long-run-air-pollution?country=~GBR" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">far cleaner</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/why-cheap-waste-management-is-key-to-stopping-plastic-pollution" class="span-link"><span class="">Read our article on why addressing this problem — increasing basic waste management — is key to tackling plastic pollution.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Coffee production has shifted toward Asia over the last six decades]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/coffee-production-has-shifted-toward-asia-over-the-last-six-decades</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/coffee-production-has-shifted-toward-asia-over-the-last-six-decades"/>
            <published>2026-05-26T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-26T08:53:49.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Esteban Ortiz-Ospina</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/8d963cd9-adc4-4149-2078-9748239f7f00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/8d963cd9-adc4-4149-2078-9748239f7f00/w=1350" alt="Stacked area chart of regional share of the world&#x27;s green coffee bean production by weight from 1961 to 2024, where South America remains the largest producer while Asia&#x27;s share rises notably over time and Africa and smaller regions decline or stay small. Data source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Coffee is part of daily life for millions of people around the world. It’s also a key source of income and employment in many countries. In this chart, I want to focus on the shift in where it is grown over the last six decades.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The chart shows the breakdown of global green coffee bean production by region, from 1961 to 2024. Green coffee beans are those that haven’t yet been roasted.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">South America has been the largest producing region throughout this period, but its share of global output has fallen, as has Africa’s. The biggest story is the growth of coffee production in Asia: it went from producing less than 5% of the world’s coffee in the early 1960s to about 32% today.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Much of Asia’s growth comes </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/coffee-bean-production?tab=line&amp;country=~VNM" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">from Vietnam</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">, where production rose from around 5,000 tonnes in the early 1980s to about 2 million tonnes today. It now produces more than all African countries combined.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">This expansion was driven largely by </span><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffea_canephora" class="span-link"><span class="">the spread of </span><em><span class="">Robusta</span></em></a><span class="">, a hardier and higher-yielding variety than </span><em><span class="">Arabica</span></em><span class="">, which is the type that dominates Latin American production.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Brazil is the world’s largest producer, while Vietnam is now second. Colombia used to be in that position, but </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/coffee-bean-production?tab=line&amp;country=VNM~COL~BRA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Vietnam overtook it</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> in 1999.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/coffee-bean-production?country=VNM~COL~BRA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore coffee production data for all countries.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[One in four cars sold in 2025 was electric]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/one-in-four-cars-sold-in-2025-was-electric</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/one-in-four-cars-sold-in-2025-was-electric"/>
            <published>2026-05-23T07:37:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-03T06:18:45.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/536c902d-79a2-49d8-da50-511fa67a0800/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/536c902d-79a2-49d8-da50-511fa67a0800/w=1350" alt="Horizontal bar chart of the share of new cars sold in 2025 that were electric, where it compares countries and regions and shows large differences — Norway about 97%, China about 53% (more than half), and the global average about 25%. Note: &quot;electric&quot; includes fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids; data source: International Energy Agency, Global EV Outlook (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The International Energy Agency (IEA) just published its latest annual </span><a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/global-ev-outlook-2026" class="span-link"><span class="">Global EV Outlook</span></a><span class="">. It provides estimates for electric vehicle sales in 2025.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">One in four (25%) cars sold in 2025 were electric, more than double the share from just four years earlier.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But there are large differences in adoption rates across the world. This chart shows new sales shares by country. In Norway, almost every new car is an electric one. In China, more than half are, while in the United States, it’s just 10%.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">These figures include fully electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids. You can find this data broken down by vehicle type in </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-car-sales-battery-plugin" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">this chart</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/electric-car-sales" class="span-link"><span class="">Explore the latest data on electric car sales across the world</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Global sales of combustion engine cars peaked in 2017]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/global-sales-of-combustion-engine-cars-peaked-in-2017</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/global-sales-of-combustion-engine-cars-peaked-in-2017"/>
            <published>2026-05-21T05:33:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-03T06:19:43.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/cf3fde2b-8333-4cee-d605-bc67ec195900/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/cf3fde2b-8333-4cee-d605-bc67ec195900/w=1350" alt="Stacked bar chart of annual global car sales (non-electric and electric) from 2010 to 2025 where non-electric (combustion engine) sales peaked in 2017 and then declined while electric car sales rise and form a growing share of total sales by 2024 to 2025. Source: International Energy Agency, Global EV Outlook (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">To decarbonize road transport, the world must move away from petrol and diesel cars towards electric vehicles and other forms of low-carbon transport.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">This transition has already started. In fact, global sales of combustion engine cars are well past their peak and are now falling.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">As you can see in the chart, global sales peaked in 2017. This is calculated based on data from the </span><a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/global-ev-outlook-2024" class="span-link"><span class="">International Energy Agency</span></a><span class="">. Bloomberg New Energy Finance also </span><a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-01-30/world-hit-peak-gas-powered-vehicles-as-evs-gain-market-share" class="span-link"><span class="">estimated</span></a><span class=""> this peak occurred around that time.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Sales of electric cars, on the other hand, are growing quickly. They </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/electric-car-sales?tab=line&amp;country=~OWID_WRL" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">more than doubled</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> in the three years from 2022 to 2025.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/electric-car-sales" class="span-link"><span class="">Explore the latest data on electric car sales across the world</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Tajikistan's remittances are worth nearly half the country’s GDP]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/tajikistans-remittances-are-worth-nearly-half-the-countrys-gdp</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/tajikistans-remittances-are-worth-nearly-half-the-countrys-gdp"/>
            <published>2026-05-19T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-19T13:00:52.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Esteban Ortiz-Ospina</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/9ffe9319-cbd2-4f21-282d-fc420ff6ee00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/9ffe9319-cbd2-4f21-282d-fc420ff6ee00/w=1350" alt="Bar chart of remittances (money sent or brought back by migrants) as a share of GDP for countries in 2024 where a few countries receive very large shares — the top country is Tajikistan at 48% of GDP — while most countries receive much smaller shares, many close to 0%. Source: World Bank staff estimates based on IMF and OECD data (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In Tajikistan, remittances — the money sent or brought back by migrants — amounted to 48% of GDP in 2024. The chart places this figure in context by comparing it with other countries with data for the same year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Nicaragua and Honduras receive remittances worth around a quarter of their GDP — high by global standards, but still far below Tajikistan&#x27;s level.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Remittances here include two types of flows: money migrants abroad send home to their families, and money cross-border workers bring home from short-term jobs abroad.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Both of these flows play a role in Tajikistan, where most remittances come from labor migrants in Russia. In addition to the roughly </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/migration-flows?hideControls=false&amp;Country=Tajikistan&amp;Metric=Emigrants%3A+People+moving+away+from+country&amp;Gender=All+migrants&amp;country=USA~GBR~FRA~MEX~IND~CHN~DEU~AUS~BRA~ZAF" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">400,000 Tajiks settled there</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">, hundreds of thousands more cross the border for seasonal and short-term work.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">According to a </span><a href="https://dtm.iom.int/sites/g/files/tmzbdl1461/files/reports/TAJ_Migration%20Situation%20Report_ENG_0.pdf" class="span-link"><span class="">report</span></a><span class=""> from the International Organization for Migration, about 1.2 million Tajiks were in Russia in mid-2024, which is more than a tenth of Tajikistan&#x27;s </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/population-with-un-projections?country=~TJK&amp;mapSelect=~TJK" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">total population</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The World Bank&#x27;s latest </span><a href="https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/099713007282542605/pdf/IDU-bd1d1196-74d2-40ba-ba39-95e6e426736e.pdf" class="span-link"><span class="">Tajikistan Economic Update</span></a><span class=""> says that much of the country&#x27;s recent rapid economic growth (</span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/real-gdp-growth?time=1980..2025&amp;country=~TJK" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">above 8% since 2021</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">) was supported by these remittance inflows.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/great-global-redistributor-money-sent-brought-back-migrants-remittances" class="span-link"><span class="">Explore interactive data on remittances for all countries.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[China added a Germany-sized electricity grid last year]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/china-added-a-germany-sized-electricity-grid-last-year</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/china-added-a-germany-sized-electricity-grid-last-year"/>
            <published>2026-05-16T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-16T08:21:09.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Rosado</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f3201a2d-cfcf-4576-96a3-79c609ce9200/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f3201a2d-cfcf-4576-96a3-79c609ce9200/w=1350" alt="Bar chart of the change in China’s electricity generation from 2024 to 2025 compared to the annual electricity generation of other countries, where China’s 2025 increase is about 497 TWh—mostly from solar (340 TWh) and wind (140 TWh)—roughly the size of Germany’s annual generation and larger than countries like South Africa, Italy, Australia, Spain, and the UK (240 to 290 TWh) but smaller than France (570 TWh) and Brazil (750 TWh). Source: Ember (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">We’ll often see headlines quoting how many gigawatts of new solar farms or coal plants China is building. But it’s hard to get a meaningful sense of scale for how electricity generation in China is changing.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The chart puts it in perspective.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In 2025 alone, China’s electricity generation increased by almost 500 terawatt-hours (TWh). This is compared here to the total amount of electricity that whole countries generate each year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Germany generates almost exactly that amount. That means China effectively added a Germany-sized grid to its electricity system in just one year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">What’s also quite staggering is that almost all of this new generation came from solar and wind. China generated 340 TWh more electricity from solar than the year before.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">That’s more than our two home countries, the UK and Spain, generate from all sources each year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Low-carbon sources grew so much that coal power in China actually </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/energy?tab=line&amp;country=~CHN&amp;Total+or+Breakdown=Select+a+source&amp;Energy+or+Electricity=Electricity+only&amp;Metric=Annual+generation&amp;Select+a+source=Coal" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">fell slightly</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/search?datasetProducts=Electricity+Mix" class="span-link"><span class="">This data comes from Ember’s latest global electricity review — you can explore more of this data on our site.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Japan closed nearly all of its nuclear plants after Fukushima, but some are coming back online]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/japan-closed-nearly-all-of-its-nuclear-plants-after-fukushima-but-some-are-coming-back-online</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/japan-closed-nearly-all-of-its-nuclear-plants-after-fukushima-but-some-are-coming-back-online"/>
            <published>2026-05-14T03:41:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-06-03T08:17:18.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/4c837ab4-03a1-49a4-3de3-92a02ab96300/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/4c837ab4-03a1-49a4-3de3-92a02ab96300/w=1350" alt="Stacked area chart of Japan’s share of electricity generation from fossil fuels, nuclear, and renewables between 1985 and 2025 where after the 2011 Fukushima disaster nuclear output fell from about 25% to near 0% and then partially restarted to about 9% by 2025, while fossil fuels rose and renewables increased modestly. Source: Energy Institute - Statistical Review of World Energy (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Japan closed down most of its nuclear plants after the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in 2011, and nuclear production dropped dramatically.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">You can see this in the chart, which shows Japan&#x27;s electricity mix since 1985. It’s based on data from the </span><a href="https://www.energyinst.org/statistical-review/" class="span-link"><span class="">Energy Institute</span></a><span class="">.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Fossil fuel plants — notably coal and gas — were ramped up to keep the lights on. The first nuclear reactors only came back online in 2015, under stricter rules from a new safety regulator created after the disaster.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">As of early 2026, 15 reactors are running — out of 54 before Fukushima — and nuclear&#x27;s share of electricity is still only around a third of its pre-2011 level.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/what-was-the-death-toll-from-chernobyl-and-fukushima" class="span-link"><span class="">Read our article on the death toll of the Fukushima and Chernobyl disasters</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Cereal yields in Ghana have increased much faster over the past decade]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/cereal-yields-in-ghana-have-increased-much-faster-over-the-past-decade</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/cereal-yields-in-ghana-have-increased-much-faster-over-the-past-decade"/>
            <published>2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-12T09:11:14.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/bb0c4e41-af51-4fd6-20f1-4d003db97400/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/bb0c4e41-af51-4fd6-20f1-4d003db97400/w=1350" alt="Line chart of cereal yields in tonnes per hectare for Ghana and the African average from 1961 to 2021 where Ghana’s yields diverge and rise faster than the African average in the 2010s, with a marked increase after 2017. Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Crop yields across Africa have lagged far behind the rest of the world — the regional average is around </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/global-food?tab=line&amp;country=OWID_ASI~OWID_WRL~OWID_AFR&amp;Food=Cereals&amp;Metric=Yield&amp;Per+capita=false" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">2.5 times lower</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> than the global average.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But some countries in the region show that yields can grow much faster. Ghana is one example. In the chart, you can see its cereal yields compared to the average for Africa as a whole.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Several government programs contributed to this growth.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In 2008, the Ghanaian government launched a fertilizer subsidy program; it had some impact on yields but was relatively modest.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The largest shift came from the introduction of the </span><a href="https://openknowledge.fao.org/server/api/core/bitstreams/1e61dda5-186a-4ced-81d8-84d4bba0702b/content" class="span-link"><span class="">Planting for Food and Jobs program</span></a><span class=""> in 2017, which dedicated large public funds to distributing improved seeds, fertilizers, and other inputs to farmers.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The data shown is based on nationally reported statistics, and some researchers question the exact size of the reported gains.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But the result that yields have gone up </span><a href="https://foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/1460" class="span-link"><span class="">looks robust</span></a><span class="">: independent modeled assessments </span><a href="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12571-022-01287-8" class="span-link"><span class="">estimate that</span></a><span class=""> maize and rice production are over 40% higher than they would have been without the program.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/africa-yields-problem" class="span-link"><span class="">Read my article on why increasing agricultural productivity in Sub-Saharan Africa is one of today’s most important challenges.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Global biofuel production has grown sevenfold in the last 20 years, despite the rise of electric cars]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/global-biofuel-production-has-grown-sevenfold-in-the-last-20-years-despite-the-rise-of-electric-cars</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/global-biofuel-production-has-grown-sevenfold-in-the-last-20-years-despite-the-rise-of-electric-cars"/>
            <published>2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-09T14:51:08.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/24929f00-54ee-43ac-7072-e6aa0d7e1d00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/24929f00-54ee-43ac-7072-e6aa0d7e1d00/w=1350" alt="Line chart of global liquid biofuel production (bioethanol and biodiesel) in terawatt-hours per year where production is relatively flat through the 1990s and early 2000s then rises sharply from the mid-2000s to about 1,400 TWh in 2024, roughly a sevenfold increase over the last 20 years. Source: Energy Institute — Statistical Review of World Energy (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In the late 20th century, a handful of countries — led by Brazil and the United States — turned to liquid biofuels to reduce their dependence on foreign oil markets, producing transport fuels from cheap crops instead.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In the early 2000s, interest in biofuels ramped up sharply, and not just in the Americas. They came to be seen as a leading method to decarbonize road transport. This was because today’s alternative to the combustion engine, the electric car, was still </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/battery-price-decline" class="span-link"><span class="">far too expensive</span></a><span class="">.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Over the last two decades, global liquid biofuel production has grown sevenfold, as the chart shows.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Electric vehicles are now far cheaper and, in some places, </span><a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/global-ev-outlook-2025/trends-in-electric-car-affordability" class="span-link"><span class="">cost-competitive with petrol cars</span></a><span class="">, so biofuels are no longer seen as the central answer to low-carbon transport.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Yet, the world produces more of them than ever, and this is </span><a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/renewables-2023/transport-biofuels" class="span-link"><span class="">expected to grow</span></a><span class=""> over the coming decade, largely due to fuel standards and national policies that have promoted them.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/biofuel-land-solar-electric-vehicles" class="span-link"><span class="">Read our article: “Putting solar panels on land used for biofuels would produce enough electricity for all cars and trucks to go electric”.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[More than a million people die from road injuries every year]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/more-than-a-million-people-die-from-road-injuries-every-year</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/more-than-a-million-people-die-from-road-injuries-every-year"/>
            <published>2026-05-07T05:05:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-07T07:29:59.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f509d13d-e86f-4a63-d3af-ddca5400d200/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f509d13d-e86f-4a63-d3af-ddca5400d200/w=1350" alt="Stacked area chart of annual global deaths from road injuries by road-user type from 1980 to 2023, where total deaths exceed one million per year and the composition changes over time. Pedestrians and vehicle drivers/passengers make up the largest shares, with motorcyclists, cyclists, and other road injuries also contributing. Data source: IHME, Global Burden of Disease (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Around 1.3 million people die from road injuries across the world every year. That includes the deaths of drivers, passengers, and pedestrians.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">That’s around </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/what-do-people-die-from-in-different-countries" class="span-link"><span class="">2.4% of deaths</span></a><span class=""> from all causes.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">As the chart shows, this death toll has been similar for decades, in the range of 1.25 to 1.35 million deaths each year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">However, with a larger global population and many more cars on the road, this means the </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/death-rate-from-road-accidents?tab=chart&amp;country=~OWID_WRL" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">death </span><em><span class="">rate</span></em><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> from road injuries — the number of deaths per 100,000 people — has fallen.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/road-deaths-by-type" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore road injury data by type for individual countries.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Low-carbon electricity sources grew faster than demand in 2025, pushing fossil fuels into decline]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/low-carbon-electricity-sources-grew-faster-than-demand-in-2025-pushing-fossil-fuels-into-decline</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/low-carbon-electricity-sources-grew-faster-than-demand-in-2025-pushing-fossil-fuels-into-decline"/>
            <published>2026-05-05T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-05-04T06:24:53.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Rosado</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f646c710-73dc-4854-dd55-6be7ecc11200/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/f646c710-73dc-4854-dd55-6be7ecc11200/w=1350" alt="Bar chart of change in global electricity generation by source from 2024 to 2025 where low-carbon sources met all of the 850 terawatt-hours increase in total generation. Solar and wind provided the largest increases (solar about 636 TWh, wind about 204 TWh), with smaller rises from nuclear and other renewables and a modest increase in gas, while coal and oil declined (coal about minus 67 TWh, oil about minus 12 TWh). Data source: Ember (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Solar and wind energy have grown quickly in recent years, but global electricity demand has grown faster. So while their share of electricity generation kept rising, it wasn&#x27;t enough to push fossil fuels into absolute decline.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But in 2025, that changed. According to </span><a href="https://ember-energy.org/latest-insights/global-electricity-review-2026/2025-in-review/" class="span-link"><span class="">Ember&#x27;s Global Electricity Review</span></a><span class="">, low-carbon electricity sources grew faster than demand, pushing some fossil fuels out of the mix.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Global electricity generation increased by around 850 terawatt-hours (TWh) from 2024 to 2025. As you can see in the chart, solar and wind accounted for nearly all of this growth. While the world still burned slightly more gas, this was more than offset by a decline in coal and oil.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">To reduce carbon emissions, fossil fuel use needs to keep falling in absolute terms — not just in the power sector but also in </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/energy?tab=line&amp;Total+or+Breakdown=Select+a+source&amp;Energy+or+Electricity=Primary+energy&amp;Metric=Annual+consumption&amp;Select+a+source=Fossil+fuels&amp;country=~OWID_WRL" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">other energy</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> and industrial sectors.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/search?datasetProducts=Electricity+Mix" class="span-link"><span class="">This data comes from Ember’s latest global electricity review — you can explore more of this data here.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[India went from 15% to 70% Internet access in a decade, mostly through mobile phones]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/india-went-from-15-to-70-internet-access-in-a-decade-mostly-through-mobile-phones</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/india-went-from-15-to-70-internet-access-in-a-decade-mostly-through-mobile-phones"/>
            <published>2026-05-02T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-04-26T13:00:01.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Esteban Ortiz-Ospina</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/72f2d851-9f18-44b5-eee3-e1f1e0b0c400/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/72f2d851-9f18-44b5-eee3-e1f1e0b0c400/w=1350" alt="Line chart of the percentage of the population who accessed the internet in the last three months from 1990 to 2025, where it illustrates rapid growth in India. The line shows India rising from 0% in the 1990s to about 70% in 2025. The global average at 74% in 2025, high-income countries around 94% and low-income countries about 23%; figures include access from any device. Data source: International Telecommunication Union via World Bank (2026). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In 2018, my colleague Max Roser wrote </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/internet-history-just-begun" class="span-link"><span class="">an article</span></a><span class=""> titled “The Internet’s history has just begun”. His point was that while the Internet had already changed the world, large changes lay ahead because billions of people weren’t using it yet.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">In this chart, I revisit that observation using more recent data from India, the world’s most populous country.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">When Max wrote his article, roughly one in five people in India were online. The chart shows that since then, adoption has grown much faster than in the decades before. Today, more than 70% of India’s population is online — close to the global average.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">When you look at </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/ict-adoption-per-100-people?time=1990..latest&amp;country=~IND" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">related trends</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> in the adoption of communication technologies, you see that much of the sudden acceleration in growth after 2018 was driven by mobile phones.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Mobile phone subscriptions in India took off in the early 2000s and had already reached 75 per 100 people by 2015. Internet access accelerated through its mobile networks, which were made affordable by new technologies and market competition — including a </span><a href="https://blogs.worldbank.org/en/developmenttalk/indias-digital-transformation-could-be-game-changer-economic-development" class="span-link"><span class="">major market disruption</span></a><span class="">, which started in 2016 when a new low-cost entrant drove down prices.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/ict-adoption-per-100-people?time=1990..latest&amp;country=~IND" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore the data on the adoption of communication technologies in our interactive chart.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Teenage pregnancy rates have fallen across the world]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/teenage-pregnancy-rates-have-fallen-across-the-world</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/teenage-pregnancy-rates-have-fallen-across-the-world"/>
            <published>2026-04-30T05:45:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-04-30T05:45:18.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/0da24bd8-def9-4d61-7a78-6f8cc7063300/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/0da24bd8-def9-4d61-7a78-6f8cc7063300/w=1350" alt="Line chart of teenage pregnancy rates (number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19) where rates decline for all regions between 2000 and 2024, with Sub‑Saharan Africa remaining highest (129 to 93) and Europe and North America lowest (28 to 9). Central and South Asia shows the largest drop from 106 to 25. Source: United Nations (2025). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Teenage pregnancy rates have fallen across all regions in the last few decades.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The chart shows the number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 since 2000, based on data compiled by the United Nations.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Globally, rates have fallen by over one-third. This decline has been even more dramatic in some regions. For example, rates have fallen by over three-quarters in Central and South Asia.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Birth rates have also fallen </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/adolescent-fertility?tab=line&amp;country=Northern+Africa+%28UN%29~Sub-Saharan+Africa+%28UN%29~Central+and+Southern+Asia+%28UN%29~Eastern+and+South-Eastern+Asia+%28UN%29~OWID_WRL~UNSDG_SSA~UNSDG_CSA~UNSDG_ENA~UNSDG_LAC" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">among adolescents aged 10 to 14 years old</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">, where health concerns for pregnancy in such young girls are even greater.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/adolescent-fertility-15-19" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore teenage pregnancy data for individual countries.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[What is the most unequal country in South America? It depends on what metric you look at]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/what-is-the-most-unequal-country-in-south-america-it-depends-on-what-metric-you-look-at</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/what-is-the-most-unequal-country-in-south-america-it-depends-on-what-metric-you-look-at"/>
            <published>2026-04-28T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-04-26T12:59:25.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Esteban Ortiz-Ospina</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/91716cbc-4d6b-44d1-6440-7b47a3f9cb00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/91716cbc-4d6b-44d1-6440-7b47a3f9cb00/w=1350" alt="Bar chart of income shares where it compares the share received by the richest 10% and the richest 0.1% across seven countries (Colombia, Chile, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Uruguay, Argentina) to show concentration of income at the very top. The richest 10% receive about 43% to 63% of income while the richest 0.1% receive about 3% to 22%, with Peru showing the highest 0.1% share. Data source: World Inequality Database (2026). License: CC BY. Income measured before taxes and benefits, based on 2022 data." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">One way to measure income inequality is to look at the share of all income that goes to the top income earners. The chart plots this for all seven South American countries with comparable 2022 pre-tax income estimates in the World Inequality Database.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The difference between the left and right bars is which earners they cover: the richest 10% on the left, the richest 0.1% on the right.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Looking at the left-hand bars, Colombia ranks top. It has the highest share going to the richest 10%, followed by Chile, Brazil, and Peru — in these four countries, the top 10% share earns more than half of all income. This is high </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/inequality?time=2022&amp;Data=World+Inequality+Database+%28Incomes+before+tax%29&amp;Indicator=Share+of+the+richest+10%25&amp;country=COL~PER~CHL~BRA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">relative to other countries</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> around the world.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But looking at the dark blue bars on the right, the rankings change. Peru’s richest 0.1% receive about 22% of income, the highest in the region by far, and actually </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/inequality?time=2022&amp;mapSelect=COL~PER~CHL~BRA~IRQ&amp;Data=World+Inequality+Database+%28Incomes+before+tax%29&amp;Indicator=Share+of+the+richest+0.1%25&amp;country=COL~PER~CHL~BRA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">the highest in the world</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> that year.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">This chart shows just two metrics, but you would also get different pictures if you looked at </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/inequality?Data=World+Inequality+Database+%28Incomes+before+tax%29&amp;Indicator=Gini+coefficient&amp;country=CHL~BRA~ZAF~USA~FRA~CHN" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Gini coefficients</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> or </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/wealth-share-richest-1-percent" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">the distribution of wealth</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> instead.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">So, what is the most unequal country in South America? It depends on what metric you look at. This is a region with high inequalities, but different indicators will tell you different stories depending on which part of the distribution you examine, and </span><a href="https://books.core-econ.org/insights/a-world-of-differences/03-measuring-economic-inequality.html" class="span-link"><span class="">how incomes are measured</span></a><span class="">.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/inequality?time=2022&amp;mapSelect=COL~PER~CHL~BRA~IRQ&amp;Data=World+Inequality+Database+%28Incomes+before+tax%29&amp;Indicator=Share+of+the+richest+0.1%25&amp;country=COL~PER~CHL~BRA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore other inequality indicators in our Economic Inequality Data Explorer.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[The global number of people without electricity has halved since 2000, but it has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/the-global-number-of-people-without-electricity-has-halved-since-2000-but-it-has-increased-in-sub-saharan-africa</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/the-global-number-of-people-without-electricity-has-halved-since-2000-but-it-has-increased-in-sub-saharan-africa"/>
            <published>2026-04-25T00:00:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-04-20T07:08:47.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/03957f2a-1172-4dbf-ba69-35c1f75e0200/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/03957f2a-1172-4dbf-ba69-35c1f75e0200/w=1350" alt="Stacked area chart of the number of people without electricity by world region from 2000 to 2023, where the global total has roughly halved since 2000 but the population without electricity has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa while declining in most other regions. Data source: compiled from multiple sources by the World Bank; License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Most people in the world would think very little before flicking on the lights, charging a mobile phone or turning on a laptop to read this.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">But that’s a very different reality from the almost 700 million people in the world who have no access to electricity. While this number is large, it has halved this century, falling from 1.35 billion to 675 million. You can see this in the chart.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">However, this progress has been far from even. The number has fallen across all regions except Sub-Saharan Africa, where it has increased.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">That doesn’t mean no progress has been made: the </span><em><span class="">share</span></em><span class=""> of people in Sub-Saharan Africa with electricity </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/share-of-the-population-with-access-to-electricity?tab=line&amp;country=~WB_SSA&amp;mapSelect=~WB_SSA" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">has doubled</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class="">, rising from 26% to 53%. But population growth has outpaced this expansion, meaning the </span><em><span class="">number</span></em><span class=""> of people without electricity has still risen.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/four-minutes-of-air-conditioning" class="span-link"><span class="">Billions of people have access to far less electricity than is needed to run AC for just one hour a day, as I explored in a recent article.</span></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
<entry>
            <title><![CDATA[Which countries have fertility rates above or below the “replacement level”?]]></title>
            <id>https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/which-countries-have-fertility-rates-above-or-below-the-replacement-level</id>
            <link rel="alternate" href="https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/which-countries-have-fertility-rates-above-or-below-the-replacement-level"/>
            <published>2026-04-23T06:12:00.000Z</published>
            <updated>2026-04-23T06:12:45.000Z</updated>
            <author><name>Hannah Ritchie</name></author><author><name>Pablo Arriagada</name></author>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/d0acecb3-215e-4ce7-ccf8-9141f52aba00/w=1350"/><img src="https://ourworldindata.org/cdn-cgi/imagedelivery/qLq-8BTgXU8yG0N6HnOy8g/d0acecb3-215e-4ce7-ccf8-9141f52aba00/w=1350" alt="Choropleth world map of national fertility rates where countries are classified as having fertility above or below the 2.1 births per woman replacement level to show global patterns in 2025. It notes many high-income countries (US, UK, France) have 1.5 to 1.6 live births on average, China has 1 live birth, South Korea 0.8, and Somalia and Chad have 5.9 live births, the highest. Data source: UN, World Population Prospects (2024). License: CC BY." width="1350" height="1350"/><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">Fertility rates — which measure the average number of children per woman — have been falling worldwide. Since 1950, </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/fertility-rate-with-projections?country=~OWID_WRL" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">global fertility rates</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> have halved, from almost 5 children per woman to 2.2.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">As a result, </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/population-growth-rates?tab=chart&amp;country=~OWID_WRL" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">global population growth</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> has slowed dramatically, and many countries&#x27; populations are </span><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/population-and-demography?facet=entity&amp;uniformYAxis=0&amp;country=KOR~CHN~ESP~MEX~JPN~ITA&amp;hideControls=false&amp;indicator=Population&amp;Sex=Both+sexes&amp;Age=Total&amp;Projection+scenario=Medium" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">expected to decline</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><span class=""> by the end of the century.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">This is because fertility rates in many countries have fallen below the “replacement level”. This is the level at which a population replaces itself from one generation to the next. It’s generally defined as a rate of 2.1 children per woman.</span></p><p class="article-block__text col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2"><span class="">The map shows which countries had fertility rates above and below this level in 2025. This is based on projections from the UN World Population Prospects.</span></p><div class="article-block__cta col-start-5 span-cols-6 col-md-start-3 span-md-cols-10 span-sm-cols-12 col-sm-start-2 cta"><a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/fertility-rate-with-projections" class="span-link span-linked-chart"><span class="">Explore how fertility rates have changed across countries over time, and how they are projected to evolve through 2100.</span><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="chart-line" class="svg-inline--fa fa-chart-line span-linked-chart-icon" role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M64 64c0-17.7-14.3-32-32-32S0 46.3 0 64L0 400c0 44.2 35.8 80 80 80l400 0c17.7 0 32-14.3 32-32s-14.3-32-32-32L80 416c-8.8 0-16-7.2-16-16L64 64zm406.6 86.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3s-32.8-12.5-45.3 0L320 210.7l-57.4-57.4c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0l-112 112c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0L240 221.3l57.4 57.4c12.5 12.5 32.8 12.5 45.3 0l128-128z"></path></svg></a><svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" data-prefix="fas" data-icon="arrow-right" class="svg-inline--fa fa-arrow-right " role="img" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M438.6 278.6c12.5-12.5 12.5-32.8 0-45.3l-160-160c-12.5-12.5-32.8-12.5-45.3 0s-12.5 32.8 0 45.3L338.8 224 32 224c-17.7 0-32 14.3-32 32s14.3 32 32 32l306.7 0L233.4 393.4c-12.5 12.5-12.5 32.8 0 45.3s32.8 12.5 45.3 0l160-160z"></path></svg></div>]]></content>
            </entry>
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