Global Electrification Push: Turkey's COP31 Proposal and India's Energy Transition Challenge
Turkey has proposed at mid-year Bonn climate talks that countries target 33 percent electricity share in total final energy consumption by 2035. Currently only 21 percent of global energy is consumed as electricity, and just 8 to 9 percent of all energy used globally is genuinely clean, highlighting the enormous scale of the energy transition challenge.
Mid-year climate negotiations held in Bonn, Germany concluded recently without significant breakthroughs, but one notable proposal emerged from Turkey. As the host of the upcoming COP31 climate conference in Antalya, Turkey has proposed that countries commit to meeting at least one-third of their total final energy consumption from electricity by 2035. Currently, only about 20 to 21 percent of global final energy is consumed as electricity, making this an ambitious step toward decarbonisation.
To understand why this matters, it is important to grasp the difference between fossil fuels and renewable energy. Fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and gas can be burned directly to produce energy. Renewable sources like solar and wind, however, must first be converted into electricity before they can be used. This means the global shift away from fossil fuels is fundamentally dependent on electrifying every end-use sector — transport, industry, heating, and more. Without widespread electrification, clean energy sources simply cannot replace fossil fuels at scale.
The numbers reveal how large the challenge truly is. As of 2025, electricity accounts for roughly 21 percent of total final energy consumption worldwide. Of that electricity, only about 42 percent comes from clean sources such as renewables, hydro, and nuclear. Taken together, barely 8 to 9 percent of total global energy used today is actually clean. More than 90 percent still depends on fossil fuels, despite three decades of climate action, policy incentives, and technology advances. In India, the electricity share in final energy consumption stands at approximately 23 percent, marginally above the global average.
Sectors like shipping, aviation, long-haul freight, and high-temperature industrial processes such as steel, cement, and glass manufacturing remain extremely difficult to electrify. These hard-to-abate sectors continue to rely on fossil fuels and represent a significant barrier to the energy transition. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that even with fast renewable growth, electricity's share in global final energy consumption will only rise to about 24 percent by 2030 — well short of Turkey's proposed 35 percent target for 2035.
For Indian exam aspirants, this topic connects several key themes. The Paris Agreement's 1.5-degree Celsius temperature limit, COP28's commitment to triple renewable capacity by 2030, and IRENA's roadmap requiring $1.2 trillion in annual electricity system investment all form part of a larger global framework. India, as a major developing economy, plays a central role in these discussions — balancing energy access needs with emission reduction commitments. Understanding total final energy consumption (TFEC), the distinction between primary energy supply and final consumption, and the concept of hard-to-abate sectors are all concepts frequently tested in competitive examinations.
Key Points to Remember
- Turkey, host of COP31 in Antalya (November 2026, co-hosted with Australia), proposed a global target of 33% electricity share in final energy consumption by 2035
- As of 2025, electricity meets only ~21% of total final energy consumption (TFEC) globally; India's figure is ~23%
- Only ~42% of current global electricity generation comes from clean sources (renewables, hydro, nuclear)
- Combined effect: just ~8-9% of total global energy use is clean energy — over 90% still fossil-fuel based
- IRENA estimates $1.2 trillion in annual investment in electricity systems is needed to reach the 35% electrification target by 2035
- Hard-to-abate sectors (aviation, shipping, steel, cement, glass) remain major barriers to full electrification
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC (GS Paper 3 — Environment, Energy), State PCS, and SSC CGL General Awareness; covers climate negotiations, energy transition, COP process, Paris Agreement, and international organisations like IEA and IRENA.
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