Energy intensity level of primary energy (MJ/$2011 PPP GDP) - Country Ranking - Central America & the Caribbean

Definition: Energy intensity level of primary energy is the ratio between energy supply and gross domestic product measured at purchasing power parity. Energy intensity is an indication of how much energy is used to produce one unit of economic output. Lower ratio indicates that less energy is used to produce one unit of output.

Source: World Bank, Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL) database from the SE4ALL Global Tracking Framework led jointly by the World Bank, International Energy Agency, and the Energy Sector Management Assistance Program.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Trinidad and Tobago 19.90 2019
2 Belize 6.12 2019
3 Haiti 5.80 2019
4 Nicaragua 4.68 2019
5 Jamaica 4.45 2019
6 Honduras 4.30 2019
7 Guatemala 4.24 2019
8 Barbados 3.54 2019
9 Antigua and Barbuda 3.45 2019
10 El Salvador 3.37 2019
11 Dominica 2.97 2019
12 St. Lucia 2.84 2019
13 Grenada 2.68 2019
14 St. Kitts and Nevis 2.58 2019
15 The Bahamas 2.53 2019
16 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 2.48 2019
17 Costa Rica 2.11 2019
18 Dominican Republic 2.08 2019
19 Cayman Islands 2.06 2019
20 Panama 1.54 2019
21 Cuba 1.27 2019
22 Puerto Rico 0.63 2019

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Limitations and Exceptions: Energy intensity level is only an imperfect proxy to energy efficiency indicator and it can be affected by a number of factors not necessarily linked to pure efficiency such as climate.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: This indicator is obtained by dividing total primary energy supply over gross domestic product measured in constant 2011 US dollars at purchasing power parity.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual