Page added on October 3, 2014
Next time you get into your car and drive to the supermarket, think about how much energy you consume on an annual basis. It is widely assumed that Westerners are some of the world’s worst energy pigs. While Americans make up just 5 percent of the global population, they use 20 percent of its energy, eat 15 percent of its meat, and produce 40 percent of the earth’s garbage.
Europeans and people in the Middle East, it turns out, aren’t winning any awards for energy conservation, either.
Oilprice.com set out to discover which countries use the most energy and why.
While some of the guilty parties are obvious, others may surprise you.
A note about the figures: we used kilograms of oil equivalent (koe) per capita, which refers to the amount of energy that can be extracted from one kilogram of crude oil. “Koe per capita” can be used to compare energy from different sources, including fossil fuels and renewables, and does here. The numbers represent the most recent data available from the World Bank.

(Image Source: Oilprice.com)
1. Iceland – 18,774 kg. Yes, that’s right, Iceland. Of all the countries in the world, including the richest and largest oil producers, Iceland consumes the most energy per person. How can that be? The reason is basically overabundance. With most of Iceland’s energy coming from hydroelectric and geothermal power, Icelanders are some of the planet’s least energy-conscious. Click here for a fascinating video of why the Nordic nation uses so much energy.
2. Qatar – 17,418 kg. Qataris are addicted to oil. According to National Geographic, the population is provided with free electricity and water, which has been described as “liquid electricity” because it is often produced through desalination, a very energy-intensive process. Qatar’s per capita emissions are the highest in the world, and three times that of the United States.
3. Trinidad and Tobago – 15,691 kg. Trinidad and Tobago is one of the richest countries in the Caribbean, and the region’s leading producer of oil and gas; it houses one of the largest natural gas processing facilities in the Western Hemisphere. T&T is the largest LNG exporter to the United States. Its electricity sector is entirely fueled by natural gas.
4. Kuwait – 10,408 kg. Despite holding the sixth-largest oil reserves in the world, and an estimated 63 trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves, the demand for electricity in Kuwait often outstrips supply. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Kuwait is perpetually in electricity supply shortage and experiences frequent blackouts each summer. The country has become a net importer of natural gas to address the imbalance.
5. Brunei – 9,427 kg. The tiny sultanate on the island of Borneo, apart from being a substantial producer and exporter of oil and natural gas to Asia, is also a habitual power hog. The nation of roughly half a million has the region’s highest number of cars per capita. Brunei also subsidizes both vehicle fuel and electricity, which is sold to the public at below-market prices.
6. Luxembourg – 7,684 kg. Landlocked Luxembourg is almost totally dependent on energy imports, mostly oil and gas. Energy consumption has increased 32 percent since 1990, with transportation responsible for 60 percent of the intake, according to an EU fact sheet.
7. United Arab Emirates – 7,407 kg. Nothing says conspicuous energy consumption like Ski Dubai. The indoor resort featuring an 85-meter-high mountain of man-made snow burns the equivalent of 3,500 barrels of oil a day. The World Resource Institute estimates the UAE uses 481 tonnes of oil equivalent to produce $1 million of GDP, compared to Norway’s 172 tonnes.
8. Canada – 7,333 kg. Oh, Canada. Kind, peace-loving Canadians certainly love their cars, along with space heaters, hot tubs and other energy-sucking toys. But while many equate Canada’s energy sector with the oil sands, it is, in fact, other forms of energy that account for the lion’s share of consumption. EcoSpark published a pie chart showing over half (57.6 percent) of Canada’s electricity comes from hydro, with coal the second most popular choice at 18 percent. Nuclear is third (14.6 percent), with oil and gas comprising just 6.3 percent and 1.5 percent, respectively.
9. United States – 6,793 kg. As the world’s largest economy and richest nation, the U.S. should obviously be included as a top 10 energy glutton. However, one puzzling fact is that despite annual economic growth, per-capita U.S. energy consumption has remained around the same level since the 1970s. According to the EIA, one explanation is that the U.S. has simply shifted the energy required to satisfy greater consumption to manufacturing centers offshore.
10. Finland – 6,183 kg. With over a third of its territory above the Arctic Circle, a cold climate, sparse population and a highly industrialized economy, it is no wonder that Finland is among the highest per-capita energy users in Europe. However, according to the International Energy Agency, Finland plans to diversify its economy away from carbon-based fuels, through a shift to renewables, including biomass, and has approved construction of two new nuclear plants.
6 Comments on "The World’s 10 Biggest Energy Gluttons"
paulo1 on Fri, 3rd Oct 2014 8:40 am
This is such a stupid article. It reminds me of some tsk tsk school suck or someone recording my offending PC joke. In the summer I am sure my wife and I are the biggest consumers of fresh vegetables per capta in the world…..making us veggie hogs!!! In the summer and fall we are salmon hogs!! We live on the wet coast with a terrific drilled well…we are water hogs I guess. And our meat consumption is way too high because we grow too much. And our energy use, my God! we use BC Hydro and spend $45 per month…way more than a Pakistani.
Luxembourg was a bit of a surprise, but the rest seems reasonable. If I lived in corn country I would eat a lot of home grown corn fed pork, I suppose. If we lived in Kuwait we would probably use too much oil to keep cool and justify living in such a hell hole.
People use what they have or can buy. Thank God I live in a world of choice.
Apples are not oranges and all energy users have their own reasons for living the way they do. Let the market dictate and the weather decide how we live.
paulo
noobtube on Fri, 3rd Oct 2014 11:02 am
Every single country listed, is friendly to the government in Washington DC.
I guess the market is whoever the United States military allows to get the oil.
No Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Venezuela, Libya, Nigeria, Angola, or China?
Basically, the United States is using the wealth of the world, to pay for its military and a bunch of asshole Americans.
What if the world decides it doesn’t want to do that anymore?
Bye bye America.
Norm on Fri, 3rd Oct 2014 8:09 pm
The USA has trillions of BOE in the fat waistlines of its 300 pound corn syrup citizens, all on food stamps and welfare.
Makati1 on Fri, 3rd Oct 2014 10:43 pm
The article should have been titled:
“The World’s 10 Biggest Energy Wasters”
It is also the list of the countries that will have the greatest pain adjusting to less, in the next decade.
Davy on Sat, 4th Oct 2014 7:12 am
More per capita hand slapping. Let’s look at regional aggregate numbers. Pain is better than death. Asia is facing death. Population overshoot is what it is. Not enough food and not enough energy for a region that has to import both vitals long distances. The Multiple mega Asian cities have no future. Systematically the dispersion of so many people out of these cities as they implode will in itself be catastrophic. The huge amount of resources and infrastructure lost in this process will be incredible. The effects on the hinterland around these cities and mega population regions will destroy the subsistence located in the less populated surrounding areas. All regions of the world have this in store but Asia is in a class of its own with half the world’s population in a land mass smaller than Russia.
andya on Sat, 4th Oct 2014 4:17 pm
This is misleading for an important reason. EROEI, most of these nations consume a lot of energy because they produce a lot of energy. The aluminium smelters in Iceland are not producing energy for Icelanders but for the world. It’s a lot more complicated then simply saying these people are energy hogs.