Mexico - Electricity production

Electricity production from oil, gas and coal sources (% of total)

Electricity production from oil, gas and coal sources (% of total) in Mexico was 80.88 as of 2015. Its highest value over the past 44 years was 83.43 in 2003, while its lowest value was 53.67 in 1971.

Definition: Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Oil refers to crude oil and petroleum products. Gas refers to natural gas but excludes natural gas liquids. Coal refers to all coal and brown coal, both primary (including hard coal and lignite-brown coal) and derived fuels (including patent fuel, coke oven coke, gas coke, coke oven gas, and blast furnace gas). Peat is also included in this category.

Source: IEA Statistics © OECD/IEA 2014 (http://www.iea.org/stats/index.asp), subject to https://www.iea.org/t&c/termsandconditions/

See also:

Year Value
1971 53.67
1972 55.32
1973 55.93
1974 58.10
1975 64.37
1976 62.59
1977 62.14
1978 70.43
1979 69.39
1980 73.42
1981 65.06
1982 69.80
1983 73.02
1984 71.22
1985 70.02
1986 75.90
1987 78.12
1988 76.81
1989 75.04
1990 72.77
1991 74.31
1992 71.39
1993 70.97
1994 78.10
1995 70.80
1996 70.34
1997 73.80
1998 77.33
1999 73.87
2000 76.20
2001 78.82
2002 80.48
2003 83.43
2004 81.68
2005 80.49
2006 80.45
2007 81.98
2008 78.82
2009 83.11
2010 81.25
2011 81.75
2012 83.27
2013 82.68
2014 79.22
2015 80.88

Classification

Topic: Environment Indicators

Sub-Topic: Energy production & use