Data Insights

Bite-sized insights on how the world is changing, published every few days.

Global biofuel production has grown sevenfold in the last 20 years, despite the rise of electric cars

Line chart of global liquid biofuel production (bioethanol and biodiesel) in terawatt-hours per year where production is relatively flat through the 1990s and early 2000s then rises sharply from the mid-2000s to about 1,400 TWh in 2024, roughly a sevenfold increase over the last 20 years. Source: Energy Institute — Statistical Review of World Energy (2025). License: CC BY.

In the late 20th century, a handful of countries — led by Brazil and the United States — turned to liquid biofuels to reduce their dependence on foreign oil markets, producing transport fuels from cheap crops instead.

In the early 2000s, interest in biofuels ramped up sharply, and not just in the Americas. They came to be seen as a leading method to decarbonize road transport. This was because today’s alternative to the combustion engine, the electric car, was still far too expensive.

Over the last two decades, global liquid biofuel production has grown sevenfold, as the chart shows.

Electric vehicles are now far cheaper and, in some places, cost-competitive with petrol cars, so biofuels are no longer seen as the central answer to low-carbon transport.

Yet, the world produces more of them than ever, and this is expected to grow over the coming decade, largely due to fuel standards and national policies that have promoted them.

Read our article: “Putting solar panels on land used for biofuels would produce enough electricity for all cars and trucks to go electric”.

More than a million people die from road injuries every year

Stacked area chart of annual global deaths from road injuries by road-user type from 1980 to 2023, where total deaths exceed one million per year and the composition changes over time. Pedestrians and vehicle drivers/passengers make up the largest shares, with motorcyclists, cyclists, and other road injuries also contributing. Data source: IHME, Global Burden of Disease (2025). License: CC BY.

Around 1.3 million people die from road injuries across the world every year. That includes the deaths of drivers, passengers, and pedestrians.

That’s around 2.4% of deaths from all causes.

As the chart shows, this death toll has been similar for decades, in the range of 1.25 to 1.35 million deaths each year.

However, with a larger global population and many more cars on the road, this means the death rate from road injuries — the number of deaths per 100,000 people — has fallen.

Explore road injury data by type for individual countries.

Low-carbon electricity sources grew faster than demand in 2025, pushing fossil fuels into decline

Bar chart of change in global electricity generation by source from 2024 to 2025 where low-carbon sources met all of the 850 terawatt-hours increase in total generation. Solar and wind provided the largest increases (solar about 636 TWh, wind about 204 TWh), with smaller rises from nuclear and other renewables and a modest increase in gas, while coal and oil declined (coal about minus 67 TWh, oil about minus 12 TWh). Data source: Ember (2026). License: CC BY.

Solar and wind energy have grown quickly in recent years, but global electricity demand has grown faster. So while their share of electricity generation kept rising, it wasn't enough to push fossil fuels into absolute decline.

But in 2025, that changed. According to Ember's Global Electricity Review, low-carbon electricity sources grew faster than demand, pushing some fossil fuels out of the mix.

Global electricity generation increased by around 850 terawatt-hours (TWh) from 2024 to 2025. As you can see in the chart, solar and wind accounted for nearly all of this growth. While the world still burned slightly more gas, this was more than offset by a decline in coal and oil.

To reduce carbon emissions, fossil fuel use needs to keep falling in absolute terms — not just in the power sector but also in other energy and industrial sectors.

This data comes from Ember’s latest global electricity review — you can explore more of this data here.

India went from 15% to 70% Internet access in a decade, mostly through mobile phones

Line chart of the percentage of the population who accessed the internet in the last three months from 1990 to 2025, where it illustrates rapid growth in India. The line shows India rising from 0% in the 1990s to about 70% in 2025. The global average at 74% in 2025, high-income countries around 94% and low-income countries about 23%; figures include access from any device. Data source: International Telecommunication Union via World Bank (2026). License: CC BY.

In 2018, my colleague Max Roser wrote an article titled “The Internet’s history has just begun”. His point was that while the Internet had already changed the world, large changes lay ahead because billions of people weren’t using it yet.

In this chart, I revisit that observation using more recent data from India, the world’s most populous country.

When Max wrote his article, roughly one in five people in India were online. The chart shows that since then, adoption has grown much faster than in the decades before. Today, more than 70% of India’s population is online — close to the global average.

When you look at related trends in the adoption of communication technologies, you see that much of the sudden acceleration in growth after 2018 was driven by mobile phones.

Mobile phone subscriptions in India took off in the early 2000s and had already reached 75 per 100 people by 2015. Internet access accelerated through its mobile networks, which were made affordable by new technologies and market competition — including a major market disruption, which started in 2016 when a new low-cost entrant drove down prices.

Explore the data on the adoption of communication technologies in our interactive chart.

Teenage pregnancy rates have fallen across the world

Line chart of teenage pregnancy rates (number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19) where rates decline for all regions between 2000 and 2024, with Sub‑Saharan Africa remaining highest (129 to 93) and Europe and North America lowest (28 to 9). Central and South Asia shows the largest drop from 106 to 25. Source: United Nations (2025). License: CC BY.

Teenage pregnancy rates have fallen across all regions in the last few decades.

The chart shows the number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 since 2000, based on data compiled by the United Nations.

Globally, rates have fallen by over one-third. This decline has been even more dramatic in some regions. For example, rates have fallen by over three-quarters in Central and South Asia.

Birth rates have also fallen among adolescents aged 10 to 14 years old, where health concerns for pregnancy in such young girls are even greater.

Explore teenage pregnancy data for individual countries.

What is the most unequal country in South America? It depends on what metric you look at

Bar chart of income shares where it compares the share received by the richest 10% and the richest 0.1% across seven countries (Colombia, Chile, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Uruguay, Argentina) to show concentration of income at the very top. The richest 10% receive about 43% to 63% of income while the richest 0.1% receive about 3% to 22%, with Peru showing the highest 0.1% share. Data source: World Inequality Database (2026). License: CC BY. Income measured before taxes and benefits, based on 2022 data.

One way to measure income inequality is to look at the share of all income that goes to the top income earners. The chart plots this for all seven South American countries with comparable 2022 pre-tax income estimates in the World Inequality Database.

The difference between the left and right bars is which earners they cover: the richest 10% on the left, the richest 0.1% on the right.

Looking at the left-hand bars, Colombia ranks top. It has the highest share going to the richest 10%, followed by Chile, Brazil, and Peru — in these four countries, the top 10% share earns more than half of all income. This is high relative to other countries around the world.

But looking at the dark blue bars on the right, the rankings change. Peru’s richest 0.1% receive about 22% of income, the highest in the region by far, and actually the highest in the world that year.

This chart shows just two metrics, but you would also get different pictures if you looked at Gini coefficients or the distribution of wealth instead.

So, what is the most unequal country in South America? It depends on what metric you look at. This is a region with high inequalities, but different indicators will tell you different stories depending on which part of the distribution you examine, and how incomes are measured.

Explore other inequality indicators in our Economic Inequality Data Explorer.

The global number of people without electricity has halved since 2000, but it has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa

Stacked area chart of the number of people without electricity by world region from 2000 to 2023, where the global total has roughly halved since 2000 but the population without electricity has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa while declining in most other regions. Data source: compiled from multiple sources by the World Bank; License: CC BY.

Most people in the world would think very little before flicking on the lights, charging a mobile phone or turning on a laptop to read this.

But that’s a very different reality from the almost 700 million people in the world who have no access to electricity. While this number is large, it has halved this century, falling from 1.35 billion to 675 million. You can see this in the chart.

However, this progress has been far from even. The number has fallen across all regions except Sub-Saharan Africa, where it has increased.

That doesn’t mean no progress has been made: the share of people in Sub-Saharan Africa with electricity has doubled, rising from 26% to 53%. But population growth has outpaced this expansion, meaning the number of people without electricity has still risen.

Billions of people have access to far less electricity than is needed to run AC for just one hour a day, as I explored in a recent article.

Which countries have fertility rates above or below the “replacement level”?

Choropleth world map of national fertility rates where countries are classified as having fertility above or below the 2.1 births per woman replacement level to show global patterns in 2025. It notes many high-income countries (US, UK, France) have 1.5 to 1.6 live births on average, China has 1 live birth, South Korea 0.8, and Somalia and Chad have 5.9 live births, the highest. Data source: UN, World Population Prospects (2024). License: CC BY.

Fertility rates — which measure the average number of children per woman — have been falling worldwide. Since 1950, global fertility rates have halved, from almost 5 children per woman to 2.2.

As a result, global population growth has slowed dramatically, and many countries' populations are expected to decline by the end of the century.

This is because fertility rates in many countries have fallen below the “replacement level”. This is the level at which a population replaces itself from one generation to the next. It’s generally defined as a rate of 2.1 children per woman.

The map shows which countries had fertility rates above and below this level in 2025. This is based on projections from the UN World Population Prospects.

Explore how fertility rates have changed across countries over time, and how they are projected to evolve through 2100.

Indoor air pollution causes almost three million premature deaths every year

Stacked area chart of annual premature deaths from household indoor air pollution by region, showing trends from 1990 to 2023 where total deaths fall from about 4.5 million in 1990 to about 3 million in 2023, driven mainly by large reductions in Asia and Africa. Smaller shares come from Europe, North America, South America and Oceania. Data source: IHME, Global Burden of Disease (2025). License: CC BY.

Most of the world's poorest people still rely on solid fuels — such as crop waste, dung, wood, and charcoal — for cooking and heating.

These fuels generate household air pollution when they’re burned. This has health impacts for those who breathe them in, and can increase the risk of a range of illnesses, including cardiovascular disease, stroke and some cancers.

Estimates from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation suggest that indoor air pollution causes almost three million premature deaths each year. That’s three million people dying earlier than they otherwise would without this pollution.

As shown on the chart, deaths from indoor pollution have fallen as more people get access to cleaner cooking fuels. Improving access to clean energy could prevent many more early deaths.

Read my colleague Max Roser’s article on the “energy ladder”: what energy sources do people on different incomes rely on?

Death rates for cervical cancer in the United Kingdom have fallen by 80% since 1950

Line chart of reported cervical cancer deaths per 100,000 women in the United Kingdom from 1950 to 2021 where the rate falls from about 8.6 deaths per 100,000 in 1950 to about 1.7 in 2021, an approximately 80% decline.

Cervical cancer death rates among women in the United Kingdom have fallen by around 80% since 1950. You can see this reduction in the chart.

This progress happened for a couple of key reasons.

The first was the introduction of population-level screening programs in 1988. Across the UK, women are invited to get a regular smear test to detect precancerous changes or cervical cancer cases early, when treatment has much better odds of success.

Another, and more recent innovation, which could put the UK on the path to eradicating cervical cancer completely, is the rollout of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. This protects someone from the HPV infection, which can later develop into cervical cancer.

In schools across the country, girls in their early teens are offered the HPV vaccine, effectively offering them long-lasting protection. I was one of the first cohorts of girls in the UK to receive this, and it’s something I’m incredibly grateful for.

The UK is not alone in its progress: a number of countries have managed to reduce cervical cancer death rates in recent decades.

Read Saloni Dattani’s article on how the HPV vaccine can eliminate cervical cancer.

France’s nuclear fleet gives it one of the world’s lowest-carbon electricity grids

Line chart of the share of total electricity generation from nuclear power where France’s share remains far above the European and global averages across 1985 to 2025. France stays roughly 70 to 80 percent in earlier years and trends down toward about 65 to 70 percent by 2025, while Europe is around 20 to 30 percent and the global average about 10 to 15 percent. Data source: Ember (2026) and EI — Statistical Review of World Energy (2025). License: CC BY.

France generates two-thirds of its electricity from nuclear power, making it the country’s dominant power source.

As the chart shows, that’s far more than the average across Europe, which is 20%, and the world as a whole, at 9%.

Nuclear power is a low-carbon electricity source, giving France a very clean electricity mix for decades.

Per unit of electricity, France emits far less greenhouse gas than its neighbors and has some of the lowest-carbon power in the world. The global average, based on lifecycle emissions, is 472 grams of carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e) per kilowatt-hour of electricity generated. In France, this figure is 42 grams.

See how low-carbon your country’s electricity is.

Hunger levels have increased across Africa over the last decade

Slope chart of the share of the population that is undernourished where regional shares are compared between 2014 and 2024, showing increases across all African regions and Middle Africa highest at 30% in 2024. Source: Food and Agriculture Organization (2025). License: CC BY.

In every region of Africa, hunger is more prevalent than a decade ago.

The chart shows the increase in the share of the population that is undernourished, comparing 2014 and 2024 (the most recent year available). These estimates come from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

The situation across Africa is dire. In Middle Africa, where hunger is most acute, almost 1 in 3 people are undernourished. In Eastern Africa, the figure is roughly 1 in 4. Across Africa as a whole, it's 1 in 5.

This marks a reversal of a longer positive trend: over the preceding decades, hunger had been falling across much of the world, including parts of Africa. That progress has now stalled or gone into reverse. Conflict, extreme weather, and the economic disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic have all contributed.

Explore this data interactively, for all countries and regions in the world.

Many countries are “leapfrogging” landlines and going straight to mobile phones

Small multiple line charts of mobile and landline phone subscriptions per 100 people from 1960 to 2023 for the United States, United Kingdom, Ghana, and Nigeria, where mobiles and landlines are plotted separately. The US and UK show landlines dominant until mobiles overtake in the early 2000s. Ghana and Nigeria show almost no landline adoption and rapid, explosive growth in mobile subscriptions.

The concept of “leapfrogging” is popular in development. It suggests that, as they develop, lower-income countries can skip intermediate technologies or systems and go straight to the modern equivalent.

One example of this is the use of landlines and mobile phones.

The landline telephone was invented in 1876 and became a dominant form of communication across Europe and North America. As you can see in the chart, it was increasingly adopted in the United States and the United Kingdom throughout the 20th century.

However, mobile phone adoption increased rapidly in the 1990s, and landlines have declined since the millennium. Mobile phones have become a substitute.

But many countries have almost skipped landline adoption entirely. Ghana and Nigeria are good examples: landline subscriptions have remained extremely low, and instead, mobile phone adoption has exploded.

Explore landline and mobile subscriptions in more countries.

The global suicide rate has fallen since the 1990s, but the death toll is still high

Line chart of estimated annual suicide deaths per 100,000 people from 1980 to 2023, where the global rate peaks near 15 per 100,000 in 1995 and then declines to about 9 per 100,000 by 2023 (roughly a 40% fall). The estimates are age-standardized and based on modeled global suicide patterns that include adjustments for missing data and underreporting. Data source: IHME, Global Burden of Disease (2025). License: CC BY.

Even after years of working with global health data, one statistic that I’m always struck by is the number of people who die by suicide every year. In 2023, it was estimated to be around three-quarters of a million.

That means suicides account for more than 1 in every 100 deaths in the world.

But a world where so many die from suicide is not inevitable. We know this because global suicide rates have fallen by an estimated 40% since the 1990s.

You can see this in the chart: rates have fallen from 15 to 9 deaths per 100,000 people over the last thirty years.

The large differences between countries also suggest that there are things that can be done to reduce this number even further.

Banning particularly toxic pesticides is one effective way to reduce suicide deaths in low- to middle-income countries; I looked at this in detail in a recent article.

Brazil, India, Vietnam, and Russia hold large reserves of rare earth, but mine very little of them

Side-by-side horizontal bar chart of national shares of global rare earths production and known reserves in 2024, where each country’s production share and reserves share are compared. It shows China dominating both production and reserves (about 69% production and 49% reserves). The United States and Myanmar have notable production shares (about 11.5% and 8% respectively) despite much smaller reserves. Brazil, India, Vietnam, and Russia hold large reserves, but mine very little of them (their production shares are all below 1%).

Some technologies central to the clean energy transition depend on rare earth elements. The permanent magnets found in many electric vehicle motors and wind turbine generators rely on them. They are also used in some military hardware.

China dominates global production of rare earths; in 2024, it accounted for nearly 70% of the global total.

But the picture is not as concentrated when you examine which countries have rare-earth reserves. That is what the chart shows, plotting production and reserve shares side by side. China still holds the most known reserves, but at 49%, this is substantially lower than its production share.

Brazil holds 23% of reserves and is barely mining them. India, Vietnam, and Russia also hold significant reserves, but only a small fraction of current output.

The large gap between where reserves are located and where mining occurs partly reflects China's early investment in mining infrastructure and processing capacity, which other producers have not yet matched. Other countries hold the geological potential but have not yet developed the infrastructure to convert it into production at scale.

Read more about which countries have the critical minerals needed for the energy transition

China’s Great Leap Forward caused a dramatic spike in child deaths

Line chart of the estimated share of newborns who die before reaching the age of five from 1950 to 2023 where child mortality in China spikes to about 1 in 3 children during the Great Leap Forward (1958 to 1962), producing a noticeable uptick in global rates. After the 1960s both China and world rates decline steadily to low single digits by 2023.

Child mortality rates in China have fallen from more than 20% in 1950 to less than 1% today.

But this steady progress was interrupted in the late 1950s during the “Great Leap Forward”. This was China’s national plan to industrialize rapidly, but it resulted in widespread famine and economic turmoil.

As the chart shows, child mortality rates spiked in China over this period, with up to one in three children dying before reaching the age of five. This change was so dramatic that it is also clearly visible in the global trend.

This data comes from the UN’s World Population Prospects.

Explore child mortality for all countries in our interactive chart.

Estimates suggest that 45% of abortions globally are unsafe — but this varies widely across regions

Estimated share of abortions that are unsafe

Horizontal bar chart showing estimated percentage of abortions that are unsafe by region, with a global average highlighted at 45%. A note above explains safe abortions have a fatality rate of less than 1 per 100,000 abortions and that unsafe procedures can have fatality rates hundreds of times higher. Region values from highest to lowest: Sub-Saharan Africa 77%, Latin America 76%, North Africa 71%, South Asia 58%, Global average 45%, Eastern Europe 14%, East Asia 11%, Western Europe 7%, Northern Europe 2%, North America 1%.

Footer notes and data sources: based on modelled estimates over the period 2010 to 2014 (more recent data is not available); estimates of abortion rates and their safety are uncertain for many countries, particularly where abortions are banned or severely restricted. Data source: Ganatra et al. (2017), titled "Global, regional, and subregional classification of abortions by safety, 2010–14: estimates from a Bayesian hierarchical model." Published on OurWorldInData.org; chart licensed under CC-BY by the author Hannah Ritchie.

Around 4 in 10 women worldwide live in countries where abortion is illegal or highly restricted. But these bans do not stop abortions completely; many women still get them, but in unsafe and unsanitary conditions.

A study published in The Lancet estimated that 45% of abortions globally are unsafe. In some regions, the share is estimated to be around three-quarters. You can see this in the chart.

This data is around ten years old, but represents the latest estimates available (suggesting that this topic gets very little attention).

Unsafe abortions dramatically increase the health risks for women. Safe abortions have very low mortality rates, typically below 1 death per 100,000 abortions.

In regions where the majority of abortions are unsafe, mortality rates can be several hundred times higher; in Western and Middle Africa, around 1 in 200 abortions result in the woman dying.

It’s estimated that approximately 8% of maternal deaths in the world are caused by unsafe abortions. That’s 23,000 women every year.

Read more about the human cost of unsafe abortions in my recent article.

Mental health care is scarce everywhere — but in poor countries, it barely exists

Bar chart of median government mental health expenditure per person per year by country income group, where high-income countries spend about $66 per person and low-income countries spend about $0.04. The chart highlights a large disparity in spending between high-income and lower-income countries. The data source is the WHO Mental Health Atlas (2024). The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

Depression, anxiety, and other mental health problems are common everywhere. They are not confined to any particular income level.

But access to care is rare. In much of the world, people who struggle with their mental health have almost no psychologists or psychiatrists to turn to.

Mental health care is scarce in all places, but it is much scarcer in poor countries. Governments in high-income countries spend about $66 per person per year on mental health care, as the chart shows. In low-income countries, that figure is $0.04.

This gap in spending reflects a gap in people. As the WHO’s latest Mental Health Atlas highlights, there is roughly one psychiatrist per million people in low-income countries. High-income countries have 70 times more.

A recent study in the Lancet Psychiatry estimated that globally, only 9% of people with major depressive disorder receive a “minimally adequate treatment”. In high-income countries, it is 27%; in Sub-Saharan Africa, just 2%.

Hundreds of millions of people in poorer countries live with treatable conditions and have no access to a psychologist or psychiatrist. It is one of the largest gaps in global health — and one that receives remarkably little attention or funding.

There are efforts to close this gap without waiting for the workforce to catch up. One approach is to train lay counsellors — people without formal clinical qualifications who learn to provide psychological support. Randomized trials in India and Zimbabwe have shown this can be effective for depression.

Another approach is to use technology: apps and, increasingly, AI-based tools that can extend the reach of limited clinical expertise. These are not substitutes for a functioning mental health system, but in places where that system barely exists, they offer a starting point.

Read more on our page on mental health.

The world gets more seafood from aquaculture than wild catch

Line chart of global seafood production from 1960 to 2022 comparing aquaculture and capture fisheries where aquaculture rises from near zero in the 1960s, accelerates from the 1990s, and overtakes capture fisheries around 2010. Capture fisheries grow earlier then level off, while aquaculture becomes the larger source of seafood by 2022. The data source is the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations via the World Bank (2026). The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

There are two ways to produce seafood: catch fish in the wild or farm your own. Seafood farming is often called “aquaculture”. Aquaculture is dominated by the farming of fish, but also includes other organisms, such as crustaceans and aquatic plants.

Aquaculture has grown rapidly over the last few decades. In fact, as the chart shows, it has overtaken wild catch since 2013.

This has relieved some pressure on wild fish stocks: if this increased demand for fish had been satisfied by wild catch, then many more would be severely overexploited.

Read more in our article on the rise of aquaculture.

Outside rich countries, widespread informal work means unemployment rates are low

Horizontal bar chart of the share of workers in informal employment by country (2023) where Madagascar, Angola, India, Bolivia, Peru, and Egypt have very high informal shares of about 96% to 71%, while Norway, Spain, Germany, Italy, and Poland are at the low end around 1.2% to 7.7%.

Last year, three-quarters of the world’s countries had unemployment rates below 10%, according to data from the International Labour Organization. Colombia, where I come from, is in that group.

I initially found Colombia’s relatively low unemployment rate surprising, because it didn’t match what I could see around me: many people doing extremely precarious work.

This chart offers an explanation. It shows, for a selection of countries of different income levels, what share of workers hold informal jobs, meaning work that lacks social protection and basic employment rights (no guaranteed benefits, no formal safety net).

As the chart shows, in Colombia, that share is almost 57%. In many lower-income countries, the share is far higher.

The reality is that low unemployment and widespread informal work can, and often do, happen at the same time. The reason this isn't paradoxical comes down to how these statistics are defined.

To count as employed in labor statistics, a person only needs to have worked for at least one hour during the survey’s reference period, often the past week. The definition is broad and includes self-employment, selling things on the street, and unpaid work in a family farm or family business. Both formal and informal jobs are included.

This means the unemployment rate can remain relatively low in poor countries, not because most workers have found stable, protected jobs, but because many have been absorbed into informal employment.

Read more about informal work and unemployment in our new Work & Employment topic page.