cefic
EU27 Efficient use of energy in the chemical industry
Energy consumption
-40%
1991–2023
Production growth
+28%
1991–2023
Energy intensity
-29%
1991–2023
Energy intensity (1,000 Gigawatt-hours)
Production index* (1991=100)
Specific energy consumption index* (1990=100)
| Year | Energy (GWh) | Prod. index | Spec. energy |
|---|
Source: Cefic analysis based on Eurostat data
*Specific energy consumption index is calculated as (energy consumption index / production index), 1991=100
*Specific energy consumption index is calculated as (energy consumption index / production index), 1991=100
EU27 : Number of enterprises, sales and employment by size-class (2023)
EU27 chemical SMEs* contribute
Sales
29%
Employment
36%
250 persons
employed or more
employed or more
From
50-249 persons
50-249 persons
From
10-49 persons
10-49 persons
From
0-9 persons
0-9 persons
| Size class | Enterprises | Net turnover | Employment |
|---|---|---|---|
| From 0-9 persons | 71% | 2% | 4% |
| From 10-49 persons | 18% | 7% | 10% |
| From 50-249 persons | 8% | 20% | 22% |
| 250 persons or more | 3% | 72% | 64% |
| SMEs total (0-249) | 97% | 29% | 36% |
Source: Cefic analysis based on Eurostat data
*SMEs: Small and Medium Enterprises, from 0 to 250 persons
*SMEs: Small and Medium Enterprises, from 0 to 250 persons
Evolution of chemicals sales (2004 vs 2024)
China overtakes Europe
and the US as global
leader in chemical sales
and the US as global
leader in chemical sales
EU 2004
27%
EU 2024
13%
Sales market share
2004
2024
| Region | 2004 share | 2024 share | Change |
|---|
Source: Cefic Chemdata International
* Rest of Europe covers UK, Switzerland, Norway, Türkiye, Russia and Ukraine
** Asia excluding China, India, Japan and South Korea
* Rest of Europe covers UK, Switzerland, Norway, Türkiye, Russia and Ukraine
** Asia excluding China, India, Japan and South Korea
Chemical sales in Europe by end market (2024)
Supplier to all key
manufacturing sectors
manufacturing sectors
Sales (2024)
€635 billion
Source: Advancy analysis based on Cefic, Eurostat, Oxford Economics