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Renewables And Biofuels Account For 8.7% Of EU Services Sector Energy Use

Energy demand in the European Union’s services sector continued to rise in 2024, reflecting the growing power needs of an increasingly digital and customer-oriented economy. According to Eurostat, final energy consumption reached 4,971 petajoules, up from 4,886 petajoules in 2023.

That marks a year-on-year increase of 1.7%. Over the longer term, energy consumption in the sector has grown by 25% since 1990.

Services Still Trail Transport, Households And Industry

Despite that growth, services accounted for 13.5% of total final energy consumption across the EU in 2024. Transport remained the largest consumer at 32.3%, followed by households at 26.0% and industry at 24.5%.

Only agriculture, forestry and fishing recorded a smaller share, representing 3.6% of final energy consumption.

Electricity And Natural Gas Continue To Dominate

Electricity and natural gas remained the primary energy sources for the services sector, together accounting for more than three-quarters of total consumption.

More than half of all energy use came from electricity (52.0%), while natural gas accounted for a further 25.4%. Renewables and biofuels contributed 8.7%, heat represented 7.7%, and oil and petroleum products 5.6%. The remaining 0.6% came from other sources, including coal and waste.

Wholesale And Retail Trade Tops Energy Use

Wholesale and retail trade remained the largest energy-consuming services subsector in 2024, using 1,021 petajoules, or 21.2% of the sector’s total consumption.

Human health and social work activities followed with 506 petajoules, representing 10.5%, while accommodation and food service activities consumed 503 petajoules, also equal to 10.5%.

Professional, scientific and technical activities, together with other service activities, accounted for the remaining 492 petajoules, or 10.2%.

A Gradual Shift In Energy Demand

Although services are not the EU’s largest energy-consuming sector, their energy footprint continues to expand. Growing reliance on electrification and digital infrastructure across offices, retail, healthcare and hospitality is steadily increasing electricity demand while reinforcing the importance of energy efficiency and a more diversified energy mix.

EU Invests €79 Billion In Environmental Protection As Companies Lead Spending

European Union member states invested €79 billion in environmental protection assets in 2025, according to Eurostat, reflecting continued spending on infrastructure aimed at reducing environmental impacts and managing natural resources.

The investment represented 0.4% of the EU’s gross domestic product and 1.9% of total investment across the economy.

Wastewater Treatment Receives The Largest Share

Wastewater treatment attracted the largest share of environmental protection investment, accounting for 37.7% of total spending. Waste management followed with 27.3%, while air and climate protection projects represented 11.2%.

Companies Lead Environmental Investment

Businesses accounted for €49.6 billion, or 62.7%, of total environmental protection investment. Spending focused on specialised technologies and equipment designed to reduce the environmental impact of production processes.

These investments included equipment to reduce air emissions, the construction and maintenance of wastewater treatment facilities, vehicles used for waste transport, and waste collection plants. Companies also invested in land for natural reserves and biodiversity protection.

Public Sector Provides The Remaining Investment

General government and non-profit institutions accounted for the remaining 37.3% of environmental protection investment.

Eurostat’s figures show that wastewater treatment, waste management and air and climate protection accounted for the largest share of environmental protection investment across the European Union in 2025.

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