Electric power transmission and distribution losses (% of output) - Country Ranking

Definition: Electric power transmission and distribution losses include losses in transmission between sources of supply and points of distribution and in the distribution to consumers, including pilferage.

Source: IEA Statistics © OECD/IEA 2018 (http://www.iea.org/stats/index.asp), subject to https://www.iea.org/t&c/termsandconditions/

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Togo 71.03 2014
2 Libya 69.70 2014
3 Benin 61.14 2008
4 Haiti 60.12 2014
5 Iraq 50.63 2014
6 Congo 44.54 2014
7 Niger 41.76 2014
8 Namibia 36.25 2014
9 Venezuela 36.04 2014
10 Honduras 34.95 2014
11 Nepal 32.21 2014
12 Gabon 27.78 2014
13 Jamaica 26.75 2014
14 Yemen 25.77 2014
15 Kyrgyz Republic 23.73 2014
16 Albania 23.69 2014
17 Cambodia 23.42 2014
18 Ghana 22.59 2014
19 Lithuania 21.98 2014
20 Moldova 21.53 2014
21 Dem. Rep. Congo 21.44 2014
22 Nicaragua 20.83 2014
23 Myanmar 20.49 2014
24 North Macedonia 19.89 2014
25 India 19.33 2014
26 Ethiopia 18.65 2014
27 Tanzania 17.66 2014
28 Montenegro 17.55 2014
29 Kenya 17.55 2014
30 Pakistan 17.14 2014
31 Algeria 17.13 2014
32 Tajikistan 17.02 2014
33 Zimbabwe 16.44 2014
34 Nigeria 16.11 2014
35 Syrian Arab Republic 15.92 2014
36 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 15.81 2014
37 Brazil 15.77 2014
38 Serbia 15.44 2014
39 Cuba 15.29 2014
40 Zambia 14.96 2014
41 Turkey 14.82 2014
42 Tunisia 14.80 2014
43 Mongolia 14.75 2014
44 Mozambique 14.72 2014
45 Morocco 14.70 2014
46 Argentina 14.66 2014
47 Côte d'Ivoire 14.33 2014
48 Panama 14.30 2014
49 Sudan 14.28 2014
50 Mexico 13.71 2014
51 Azerbaijan 13.60 2014
52 Croatia 13.13 2014
53 Ecuador 12.92 2014
54 Eritrea 12.89 2014
55 Senegal 12.87 2014
56 Iran 12.60 2014
57 Hong Kong SAR, China 12.49 2014
58 Turkmenistan 12.49 2014
59 Hungary 12.35 2014
60 Dominican Republic 12.18 2014
61 Armenia 11.99 2014
62 Kuwait 11.66 2014
63 Sri Lanka 11.44 2014
64 Bangladesh 11.40 2014
65 El Salvador 11.33 2014
66 Angola 11.27 2014
67 Cameroon 11.05 2014
68 Botswana 11.02 2014
69 Peru 10.97 2014
70 Egypt 10.95 2014
71 Romania 10.88 2014
72 Oman 10.88 2014
73 Costa Rica 10.83 2014
74 Ukraine 10.78 2014
75 Jordan 10.75 2014
76 Colombia 10.68 2014
77 Lebanon 10.47 2014
78 Russia 10.03 2014
79 Portugal 10.03 2014
80 Uruguay 9.63 2014
81 Spain 9.60 2014
82 Guatemala 9.46 2014
83 Philippines 9.41 2014
84 Indonesia 9.40 2014
85 Vietnam 9.29 2014
86 Bolivia 9.19 2014
87 Belarus 9.18 2014
88 Latvia 9.04 2014
89 Uzbekistan 8.82 2014
90 Suriname 8.72 2014
91 Canada 8.71 2014
92 Bulgaria 8.55 2014
93 South Africa 8.39 2014
94 United Kingdom 8.35 2014
95 Greece 8.24 2014
96 Bosnia and Herzegovina 8.18 2014
97 Ireland 7.92 2014
98 Italy 6.99 2014
99 Saudi Arabia 6.78 2014
100 United Arab Emirates 6.77 2014
101 Estonia 6.77 2014
102 Kazakhstan 6.74 2014
103 Chile 6.74 2014
104 Switzerland 6.70 2014
105 Paraguay 6.58 2014
106 New Zealand 6.54 2014
107 Poland 6.47 2014
108 Brunei 6.41 2014
109 France 6.34 2014
110 Luxembourg 6.30 2014
111 Mauritius 6.20 2014
112 Denmark 6.13 2014
113 Thailand 6.11 2014
114 Norway 6.08 2014
115 Qatar 6.05 2014
116 United States 5.91 2014
117 Malaysia 5.79 2014
118 Georgia 5.79 2014
119 China 5.47 2014
120 Belgium 5.43 2014
121 Austria 5.33 2014
122 Slovenia 4.78 2014
123 Australia 4.78 2014
124 Sweden 4.78 2014
125 Netherlands 4.77 2014
126 Malta 4.68 2014
127 Czech Republic 4.52 2014
128 Japan 4.31 2014
129 Finland 4.07 2014
130 Cyprus 3.98 2014
131 Bahrain 3.94 2014
132 Germany 3.88 2014
133 Korea 3.35 2014
134 Israel 2.86 2014
135 Iceland 2.75 2014
136 Slovak Republic 2.46 2014
137 Trinidad and Tobago 2.30 2014
138 Singapore 2.03 2014

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Development Relevance: An economy's production and consumption of electricity are basic indicators of its size and level of development. Although a few countries export electric power, most production is for domestic consumption. Expanding the supply of electricity to meet the growing demand of increasingly urbanized and industrialized economies without incurring unacceptable social, economic, and environmental costs is one of the great challenges facing developing countries. Modern societies are becoming increasing dependent on reliable and secure electricity supplies to underpin economic growth and community prosperity. This reliance is set to grow as more efficient and less carbon intensive forms of power are developed and deployed to help decarbonize economies. Maintaining reliable and secure electricity services while seeking to rapidly decarbonize power systems is a key challenge for countries throughout the world. In developing economies growth in energy use is closely related to growth in the modern sectors - industry, motorized transport, and urban areas - but energy use also reflects climatic, geographic, and economic factors (such as the relative price of energy). Energy use has been growing rapidly in low- and middle-income economies, but high-income economies still use almost five times as much energy on a per capita basis. Governments in many countries are increasingly aware of the urgent need to make better use of the world's energy resources. Improved energy efficiency is often the most economic and readily available means of improving energy security and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Limitations and Exceptions: Electricity consumption is equivalent to production less power plants' own use and transmission, distribution, and transformation losses less exports plus imports. It includes consumption by auxiliary stations, losses in transformers that are considered integral parts of those stations, and electricity produced by pumping installations. Where data are available, it covers electricity generated by primary sources of energy - coal, oil, gas, nuclear, hydro, geothermal, wind, tide and wave, and combustible renewables. Neither production nor consumption data capture the reliability of supplies, including breakdowns, load factors, and frequency of outages.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data on electric power production and consumption are collected from national energy agencies by the International Energy Agency (IEA) and adjusted by the IEA to meet international definitions. Electric power transmission and distribution losses percentage of output is the share of electric power transmission and distribution losses to electricity production which is the total number of GWh generated by power plants separated into electricity plants and CHP plants.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: Restricted use: Please contact the International Energy Agency for third-party use of these data.