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Newsletter
Feb 2026
Growth of IEA Family is milestone for global energy governance
Plus, other key outcomes from our Ministerial on critical minerals, Ukraine & more; our 3rd Energy Innovation Forum; the latest on oil markets; the rapid rise of batteries; and more ...
Newsletter of the International Energy Agency
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Welcome back to the Energy Mix. In today's edition: Highlights from our Ministerial Meeting in Paris, including closer institutional ties with Brazil, Colombia, India and Viet Nam and an expanded mandate on critical minerals security; insight from our 3rd Energy Innovation Forum; the latest trends in global oil markets; new data on the rapid rise of batteries… -
Newsletter
Mar 2026
IEA responding to major global energy security threat
…oil markets
The IEA is responding to the widespread energy market impacts of the conflict in the Middle East https://www.iea.org/topics/the-middle-east-and-global-energy-markets. The disruptions to oil and gas flows and to energy infrastructure in the region have major implications for energy security and affordability – and for the world economy.
The war in the region that began on 28 February has shrunk energy trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz to a trickle, creating what our Executive Director Fatih Birol has described as “the greatest threat to global energy security in history”… -
Newsletter
Jun 2026
The energy crisis and electrification
…as affordability, grid readiness or technology risk.
The IEA continues to track these developments around the world. At a recent high-level event in Bonn, the COP31 Presidencies of Türkiye and Australia announced that they had officially commissioned https://x.com/fbirol/status/2064427826934055184?s=20 the IEA to produce a special report this year on how to accelerate electrification in line with increasing electricity’s share of final energy consumption globally from around 20% today to 35% by 2035.
In the European Union, electrification is a central part of reaching goals on energy security, competitiveness, affordability and emissions reductions. Our… -
Newsletter
May 2026
Contending with the effects of the energy crisis
…addressed the high-level segment of the Petersberg Climate Dialogue, which was led by Chancellor Merz. Dr Birol’s remarks focused on the current energy crisis, how today's policy responses could shape the longer-term outlook and why industrial competitiveness remains central in this context.
Read more in our news article https://www.iea.org/news/iea-executive-director-meets-german-chancellor-to-discuss-energy-security-and-industrial-competitiveness.
How governments can best support consumers during this energy crisis
As the effects of the Middle East conflict have driven up prices for key fuels – including jet fuel, diesel and gasoline –... -
Newsletter
May 2026
What are the biggest sources of energy today?
3 charts that show how the world met rising global energy demand in 2025
An International Energy Agency Newsletter
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Welcome back to Energy Snapshot, the International Energy Agency’s monthly newsletter focused on charts and data. In this edition, we look at the energy sources the world depends on today – and what changes are taking place.
Were you forwarded this email? You can subscribe here. https://www.iea.org/energy-snapshot
The world is thirsty for energy. Even against a complex economic and geopolitical backdrop, global energy consumption continued to rise in 2025… -
Newsletter
Jun 2026
How the crisis is reshaping energy investment
…2026. The report finds that uncertainty over the duration of the price spike, long project lead times, supply chain constraints and tighter offshore rig markets are limiting near-term spending responses outside the Middle East. At the same time, natural gas investment is projected to rise to the highest level in a decade, supported by a wave of new LNG export projects.
The report finds growing interest among fuel-importing countries in energy sources available domestically, including renewables, nuclear power and, in some cases, coal. And while annual investment growth in renewables has moderated following several years of rapid expansion… -
Newsletter
Apr 2026
Supporting countries in the unfolding energy crisis
…This has created what amounts to “the greatest threat to global energy security in history,” according to our Executive Director Fatih Birol. The disruptions are being increasingly felt around the world and have driven significant rises in oil and gas prices, with particularly sharp spikes in jet fuel and diesel markets. To help address these unprecedented disruptions, IEA Member countries unanimously agreed https://www.iea.org/news/iea-member-countries-to-carry-out-largest-ever-oil-stock-release-amid-market-disruptions-from-middle-east-conflict last month to the largest ever release of emergency oil stocks.
As the situation… -
Newsletter
Jun 2026
How the global landscape for energy investment is changing
…org/news/impacts-of-middle-east-conflict-set-to-reshape-energy-investment-plans-as-disruptions-put-focus-on-security report shows.
Energy security is moving higher up the global agenda as a result of two major energy crises this decade. The latest shock, triggered by the war in Middle East, is encouraging investment in a range of projects that diversify suppliers or routes to market, including ways to reduce reliance on the Strait of Hormuz.
It is also reinforcing interest among fuel-importing countries in energy sources available domestically – including renewables, nuclear power, efficiency improvements and, in some cases, coal… -
Newsletter
May 2026
A deepening crisis in oil markets and beyond
…request to join IEA; discussing institutional ties with the UAE; the energy crisis impact on cooking fuel access; methane emissions and energy security; and more...
Newsletter of the International Energy Agency
Click here [Weblink] to view in your browser
Welcome back to the Energy Mix. In today's edition: The latest developments in global oil markets; meetings with the leaders from Canada, Austria and OPEC; the Nigeria government’s request to join the IEA; discussing the establishment of institutional ties with the UAE; the impact of the energy crisis on fuel supplies for cooking; methane emissions and energy security; a new… -
Newsletter
Jan 2026
What’s driving the surge in energy jobs?
…age-of-electricity-is-here takes hold. Meanwhile, employment in fossil fuel industries also remained resilient in 2024 – with the oil and gas supply sector now having recovered most of the jobs lost during the Covid crisis in 2020.
Despite the strength of recent job creation across the energy sector, there are vulnerabilities, with companies reporting deepening shortages of skilled labour.
Out of 700 energy-related companies, unions and training institutions participating in our Energy Employment Survey, more than half reported critical hiring bottlenecks that threaten to slow the building out of energy infrastructure, delay projects and raise system costs…