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Lithuania Energy Information

Lithuania Key Figures

Population:
2.83 million
GDP growth rate:
1.89 %/year
Energy independence:
27.1%

Data of the last year available: 2022

Total consumption/GDP:*
48.2 (2005=100)
CO2 Emissions:
4.11 tCO2/capita
Rate of T&D power losses:
6.95%

* at purchasing power parity

View all macro and energy indicators in the Lithuania energy report

Lithuania Related Research

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

A data overview is available in the global energy statistics app

Total Energy Consumption

Total energy consumption per capita is 2.4 toe and 4000 kWh for electricity (2022); those consumption rates are 18% and 27% below the EU average, respectively.

Graph: CONSUMPTION TRENDS BY ENERGY SOURCE (Mtoe)

In 2022, total energy consumption dropped by 12% (6.8 Mtoe), after rising by 2%/ between 2015 and 2021.

The energy intensity to GDP fell by 4%/year between 2000 and 2022, compared to 2%/year in the European Union.

Interactive Chart Lithuania Total Energy Consumption

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

View the detailed fondamentals of the market at country level (graphs, tables, analysis) in the Lithuania energy report

Crude Oil Production

Apart from a marginal production of around 30 kt, Lithuania imports all its crude oil (8.4 Mt in 2022, mainly from Russia. It is refined at the Mazeikiai refinery which has a capacity of 15 Mt/year, and which operates at around 2/3 of its capacity. The country is a net exporter of oil products (6.3 Mt of exports for 1 Mt of imports in 2022).

Interactive Chart Lithuania Crude Oil Production

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

Additionally, for more detailed information on refineries, you can request a sample of our EMEA Refineries Dataset

Oil Products Consumption

Oil consumption has been rising by 2.3%/year since 2014, reaching 2.9 Mt (2022). It had remained broadly stable at around 2.5 Mt between 2000 and 2014, after nearly halving between 1992 and 2002.

Graph: OIL CONSUMPTION (Mt)

In 2022, transport consumed nearly 2/3 of the country's oil products (65%), followed by power generation with 21%.

Graph: OIL CONSUMPTION BREAKDOWN BY SECTOR (2022, %)

Interactive Chart Lithuania Refined Oil Products Production

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

Additionally, for more detailed information on refineries, you can request a sample of our EMEA Refineries Dataset

Natural Gas Consumption

Natural gas consumption dropped by 21% in 2022 to 1.5 bcm due to high gas prices that reduced domestic fertilizer production and gas-fired power generation, a warmer winter, and the decision to use oil in Vilnius district heating. It remained quite stable between 2016 and 2021 at around 2.2 bcm and fell rapidly before, between 2011 and 2016 (-6%/year).

Industry accounted for 58% of total gas consumption in 2022 (including non-energy uses, mainly fertiliser production), followed by the residential-tertiary sector (17%) and power plants (16%).

Interactive Chart Lithuania Natural Gas Domestic Consumption

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

Additionally, for more detailed information on the LNG trade, you can request a sample of our EMEA LNG Trade Dataset

Coal Consumption

Coal consumption has been fluctuating around 0.4 Mt since 2005 (0.4 Mt in 2022).

Buildings (residential-services sector) absorb 43% of the consumption, while industry (mainly non-metallic minerals) accounts for 51% (2022).

Graph: COAL CONSUMPTION (Mt)

Graph: COAL CONSUMPTION BREAKDOWN BY SECTOR (2022, %)

Interactive Chart Lithuania Coal and Lignite Domestic Consumption

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

View the detailed consumption trends at country level (graphs, tables, analysis) in the Lithuania energy report

Power Consumption

Electricity demand has increased by 2.3%/year between 2010 and 2021, and fell by 4% in 2022 to 11.5 TWh. Previously, it had grown strongly between 2000 and 2008 (+4.6%, on average).

Graph: ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION (TWh)

Industry absorbs 33% of electricity consumption, services 29%, and the residential sector 29% (2022). Those shares have remained broadly stable since 2000.

Graph: ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION BREAKDOWN BY SECTOR (2022,%)

Renewable in % Electricity Production

The target of the National Renewable Energy and Climate Action Plan of a 23% share of renewables in final energy consumption has been exceeded since 2016 (29.6% in 2022, of which 51.5% for heating, 26.5% for power, and 6.7% for transport). The target set for renewables in 2030 in the updated NECP Draft is 55% of final consumption.

In 2021, the government announced the expected investment (€10 bn) to bring the share of green power to 50% by 2025 and 100% by 2050.

Interactive Chart Lithuania Share of Renewables in Electricity Production (incl hydro)

Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO2 data

Learn more about renewables in the European Battery Market Analysis

CO2 Fuel Combustion/CO2 Emissions

GHG emissions have remained broadly stable since 2009, but have fallen by 58% between 1990 and 2021 (20.3 Mt). They had decreased by nearly 60% between 1990 and 2000 and risen by 30% between 2000 and 2007, offset by significant drops in 2008 and 2009.

Lithuania aims to cap the increase in GHG emissions in sectors covered by the EU ETS to 15% compared to the 2005 level (15.5 MtCO2eq). Ahead of the COP 21, Lithuania's NDC includes a binding GHG emission reduction of 55% by 2030 compared to 1990.