A new report is out from the Energy Institute, and it’s quite damning for the US. The report is the 75th edition of the Statistical Review of World Energy. We’ll dive into other parts of the report, but one big thing Robert Rapier of OilPrice.com noticed is that the US dominated the world’s increase in carbon emissions in 2025.

“North America accounted for 47% of the world’s emissions increase, with U.S. emissions climbing 3.2% as coal-fired power jumped 13%,” he notes.

Total energy supply across the world rise by 1.4% in 2025, going from 592.2 exajoules the year before to 600.3 exajoules last year. “Renewable energy rose much faster in percentage terms, increasing nearly 10%. But in absolute terms, renewables added about 3.2 exajoules, while total energy supply increased by about 8.1 exajoules.” Oy….

US emissions rose by 3.2% in 2025, much more than that global average of 1.4%. This is after years of US emissions mostly declining. The big culprit, as I already said in the headline, was data center electricity demand. It didn’t help, either, that the Trump administration has been forcing utilities to keep old coal power plants open and has been blocking large wind and solar power projects.