
This page tracks key indicators across global energy markets — including oil, gas, coal, electricity and carbon pricing — alongside selected renewable energy and climate metrics.
Over time, this dashboard will expand to include climate and environmental indicators, as well as selected country-level metrics.
Rather than providing real-time data, this dashboard offers a regularly updated snapshot of data critical to climate, sustainability and the energy transition.
Energy systems
Markets and pricing
🛢 Crude oil benchmarks and pricing
Last updated: 06 May 2026 – Updated daily on weekdays
- Brent crude: $101 per barrel ↓ 8%
- WTI crude: $96 per barrel ↓ 7%
05 May data:
- Brent crude: $110 per barrel ↓ 4%
- WTI crude: $103 per barrel ↓ 2%
04 May data:
- Brent crude: $114 per barrel ↑ 4%
- WTI crude: $105 per barrel ↑ 3%
Source: Oilprice.com
Data for longer periods and historical data are available here.
Crude oil prices remain a central barometer of global economic and geopolitical stability. Recent movements reflect ongoing uncertainty around supply routes, production decisions and geopolitical tensions.
→ Explore our latest analysis on oil price volatility
🔥 Natural gas benchmarks and pricing
Last updated: 27 April 2026 – Updated weekly
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.20/MMBtu (≈$10.9/MWh) ↑ 1.6%
- Canada (AECO): $1.65/MMBtu (≈$5.6/MWh) ↑ 3.1%
- Europe (TTF): $16.00/MMBtu (≈ $54.6/MWh) ↑ 5.3%
- UK (NBP): $16.50/MMBtu (≈ $56.3/MWh) ↑ 4.4%
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $22.50/MMBtu (≈ $76.8/MWh) ↑ 4.7%
20 April data:
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.15/MMBtu (≈$10.8/MWh) ↑ 1.6%
- Canada (AECO): $1.60/MMBtu (≈$5.5/MWh) ↑ 3.2%
- Europe (TTF): $15.20/MMBtu (≈ $52.0/MWh) ↑ 4.8%
- UK (NBP): $15.80/MMBtu (≈ $54.0/MWh) ↑ 3.9%
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $21.50/MMBtu (≈ $73.5/MWh) ↑ 4.9%
13 April data:
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.10/MMBtu (≈$10.6/MWh) ↑ 1.6%
- Canada (AECO): $1.55/MMBtu (≈$5.30/MWh) ↑ 3.3%
- Europe (TTF): $14.5/MMBtu (≈ $49.50/MWh) ↑ 5.1%
- UK (NBP): $15.2/MMBtu (≈ $52/MWh) ↑ 4.8%
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $20.5/MMBtu (≈ $70/MWh) ↑ 5.1%
06 April data:
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.05/MMBtu (≈ $10.4/MWh) ↓ 1.6%
- Canada (AECO): $1.50/MMBtu (≈ $5.1/MWh) ↓ 3.2%
- Europe (TTF): $13.8/MMBtu (≈ $47/MWh) ↓ 1.4%
- UK (NBP): $14.5/MMBtu (≈ $49/MWh) ↓ 3.3%
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $19.5/MMBtu (≈ $66.5/MWh) ↓ 7.1%
30 March data:
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.1/MMBtu (≈ $10.6/MWh) → 0.0%
- Canada (AECO): $1.55/MMBtu (≈ $6.8/MWh) ↓ 22.5%
- Europe (TTF): $14/MMBtu (≈ $51/MWh) ↓ 22.2%
- UK (NBP): $15/MMBtu (≈ $50/MWh) ↑ 36.4%
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $21/MMBtu (≈ $70/MWh) ↑ 31.3%
22 March data:
- North America (Henry Hub): $3.1/MMBtu (≈ $10.6/MWh)
- Canada (AECO): $2/MMBtu (≈ $6.8/MWh)
- Europe (TTF): $18/MMBtu (≈ $61/MWh)
- UK (NBP): $11/MMBtu (≈ $37.5/MWh)
- Asia Pacific (JKM): $16/MMBtu (≈ $54.6/MWh)
Source: Various
MMBtu (million British thermal units) is the standard unit used in global gas markets. It measures energy content rather than volume.
Recent geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have exposed both the volatility of gas markets and the significant regional differences in pricing.
⚡ Europe electricity prices
Last updated: 26 April 2026 – Updated daily, published with a two to five day delay
Electricity prices are typically expressed in megawatt hours (MWh), a standard unit of energy. All prices are shown in euros (€).
Selected countries:
- Bulgaria (BLG): €40.27/MWh
- Denmark (DEN): €69.22/MWh
- Finland (FIN): €07.38/MWh
- France (FRA): €-39.97/MWh
- Germany (GER): €28.19/MWh
- Ireland (IRE): €208.33/MWh
- Italy (ITA): €106.50/MWh
- Norway (NOR): €67.41/MWh
- Poland (POL): €4.04/MWh
- Portugal (POR): €36.80/MWh
- Spain (SPA): €36.18/MWh
- Sweden (SWE): €14.69/MWh
- United Kingdom (UK): €115.14/MWh
25 April data:
- Bulgaria (BLG): €55.86/MWh
- Denmark (DEN): €25.75/MWh
- Finland (FIN): €06.00/MWh
- France (FRA): €-00.60/MWh
- Germany (GER): €18.84/MWh
- Ireland (IRE): €152.29/MWh
- Italy (ITA): €103.63/MWh
- Norway (NOR): €50.30/MWh
- Poland (POL): €15.61/MWh
- Portugal (POR): €48.97/MWh
- Spain (SPA): €48.97/MWh
- Sweden (SWE): €08.94/MWh
- United Kingdom (UK): €113.69/MWh
24 April data:
- Bulgaria (BLG): €77.12/MWh
- Denmark (DEN): €75.53/MWh
- Finland (FIN): €25.89/MWh
- France (FRA): €26.17/MWh
- Germany (GER): €75.86/MWh
- Ireland (IRE): €90.03/MWh
- Italy (ITA): €113.50/MWh
- Norway (NOR): €65.83/MWh
- Poland (POL): €98.82/MWh
- Portugal (POR): €73.26/MWh
- Spain (SPA): €73.26/MWh
- Sweden (SWE): €38.78/MWh
- United Kingdom (UK): €120.28/MWh
Source: Ember
Data for longer periods and historical data are available here.
Electricity prices across Europe vary significantly, reflecting differences in energy mix, renewable generation and interconnection capacity. Prices are expressed in megawatt hours (MWh), a standard unit of energy.
🌍 Carbon markets
Last updated: 24 April 2026 – Updated weekly
- EU ETS: €74.90 per tonne of CO₂
17 April data:
- EU ETS: €77.46 per tonne of CO₂
10 April data:
- EU ETS: €72.84 per tonne of CO₂
02 April data:
- EU ETS: €71.69 per tonne of CO₂
27 March data:
- EU ETS: €71.67 per tonne of CO₂
20 March data:
- EU ETS: €67.66 per tonne of CO₂
Carbon pricing remains a key policy tool shaping the energy transition, influencing the relative cost of fossil fuels and low-carbon technologies across the European market.
Source: Tradingeconomics.com
Capacity and deployment
🛢 Global crude oil supply
Last updated: 15 April 2026 – Updated monthly
Global output (monthly averages)
- November 2025: IEA: 103.1 mb/d | EIA: 103.3 mb/d | OPEC: 102.9 mb/d
- December 2025: IEA: 102.9 mb/d | EIA: 103.1 mb/d | OPEC: 102.7 mb/d
- January 2026: IEA: 102.7 mb/d | EIA: 102.9 mb/d | OPEC: 102.5 mb/d
- February 2026 (preliminary data): IEA: 102-103 mb/d | EIA: 102-103 mb/d | OPEC: 102 mb/d
- March 2026 (early estimates): IEA: 101.5–102.5 mb/d | EIA: 101.8–102.8 mb/d | OPEC: —
OPEC output (subset of global supply)
- January 2026: IEA: — | EIA: — | OPEC: 28,466 mb/d
- February 2026: IEA: — | EIA: — | OPEC: 28,666 mb/d ↑ +200 mb/d / +0.7%
- March 2026: IEA: — | EIA: — | OPEC: 20,788 mb/d ↓ -7,878 mb/d / -27%
Exceptional disruption month – see our live blog for the context.
OECD output (subset of global supply)
January 2026: IEA: ~31.5 mb/d | EIA: ~31.7 mb/d | OPEC: —
February 2026: IEA: ~31.7–31.9 mb/d | EIA: ~31.8–32.0 mb/d | OPEC: —
These figures are monthly averages of daily production.
☀️ Globally installed solar energy capacity
Last updated: 22 March 2026 – Updated monthly
- Total: 2,874.04 gigawatts (GW)
- Added in 2025: 647 GW
- Added in 2024: 582.49 GW
Solar capacity continues to expand rapidly, reinforcing its position as one of the fastest-growing sources of new electricity generation and a key driver of falling renewable costs.
You can read our analysis on the record additions of solar capacity in 2025 →
Source: Ember
🌬 Globally installed wind power capacity
Last updated: 23 March 2026 – Updated monthly
- Total: 1,299.52 gigawatts (GW)
- Added in 2025: 166.68 GW
- Added in 2024: 113.24 GW
Despite structural and political challenges wind power experienced a growth rate of 47% between 2024 and 2025.
You can read our analysis on the record additions of wind capacity in 2025 →
Source: Ember
Climate indicators
🌍 Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (CO₂)
Last updated: 24 March 2026 – Updated monthly
- January 2026: 428.62 PPM (Parts per Million)
- February 2026: 429.35 PPM (Parts per Million)
The monthly readings of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) is provided by the Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii in the US. It is the longest record of direct measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere, started by C. David Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in March of 1958 at a facility of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)