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Households

Households

Online ISSN: 2990-8051
CSO statistical release, , 11am

Territorial Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Households

Figure 3.1 and Table 3.1 show a breakdown of territorial greenhouse gas emissions by households between 2011 and 2023, by source of emissions. In 2023, 41% of household greenhouse gas emissions were from fossil fuels used for household heating, a further 41% were from fossil fuels used for transport, and 17% were from electricity use (including electricity used for heating and transport). Emissions from fossil fuels used to generate electricity were assigned to the final user of the electricity in this release. 

Household emissions were 24% of total greenhouse gas emissions in 2023, compared with 32% in 2011.

Household heatingPrivate vehiclesElectricityOtherHousehold share of emissions
201142.0175056245233.560114959624921.38795581783573.0344235980193131.8
201240.091822842210933.578820303819923.32622727791393.0031295760554231
201340.249950828984635.250362962527821.42768925205653.0719969564312130.3
201437.50209726502237.456944264109122.15911951243372.8818389584352128.8
201538.487527905994236.044846544746722.99777130014412.4698542491150228.9
201638.714382013603535.521428983553222.8789422530012.8852467498423428.8
201737.49893302918337.270633060262322.29354846856322.9368854419915528
201840.545819883153837.275616914399219.91778122920662.2607819732404328
201940.593414971947139.557061410026617.78462074588222.0649028721441927.7
202046.586608664311733.185494705850918.46039885867421.7674977711632527.4
202142.985904344693534.265601279673720.86847453143811.8800198441946226.5
202240.236137947690337.706979100715820.1509877680531.9058951835408624.3
202340.521355567226541.010538148147416.57355251151371.894553773112424
Table 3.1 Household Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Source of Emissions, 2011-2023

Household Heating and Energy Efficiency

Building energy ratings data show that new dwellings are increasingly using electricity as the main space heating fuel with a transformation occurring in a short time period as electricity went from being the main space heating fuel in 49% of new dwellings constructed between 2015 and 2019, to 90% of new dwellings in the period from 2020 to 2023 (see Figure 3.2 and Table 3.2). 

Heating oil was the main heating fuel used in 36% of new dwellings built between 2000 and 2004. In contrast, less than 1% of new dwellings constructed between 2020 and 2023 used heating oil as the main heating fuel.

Gas and electricity meter data can be combined with building energy ratings to measure the difference in consumption for more energy efficient dwellings. Table 3.3 shows that homes with the best energy efficiency ratings (A/B) used less electricity per square metre. The lowest rated homes (F/G) used less than C-, D- and E-rated homes, a possible indicator of energy poverty.

Table 3.4 shows data from the CSO Environmental Subsidies and Similar Transfers release on the amount of grants and tax reliefs for households for retrofits, electric vehicles and solar panels. These policy measures are aimed at lowering greenhouse gas emissions. In 2023, €225 million was paid out in energy efficiency grants to households, €116 million was provided in grants and tax reliefs on electric vehicles, and renewable energy grants to households were €52 million. 

Period of constructionMains GasHeating OilElectricity
2000-2004403620
2005-2009443219
2010-2014453220
2015-201945549
2020-202310090
Table 3.2 Main Space Heating Fuel by Period of Construction, 1700-2023

Table 3.3 Building Energy Ratings and Mean Electricity Consumption per square metre, 2015-2023

Table 3.4 Energy-related Environmental Transfers to Households, 2011-2023

Household Transport

Figure 3.3 and Table 3.5 show vehicle licensing data by fuel type. Electric vehicles made up 2.5% of taxed private cars in 2023. There was an increase of 24% in the number of licensed private cars between 2011 and 2023 and a decrease of 12% in emissions from private household transport in the same time period.

Taxation YearPetrolDieselHybridElectric
201174260.30
201270300.30
201363.283428781438636.31528605899230.388144575739760.0131405838293337
201459.58477038695539.94460312626040.4434116407516850.0272148460329089
201555.848617094000743.57175277913650.5250725545185310.0545575723441973
201651.400476684541147.8178435525480.6998313201773930.0818484427334716
201747.028068324274151.81522049534611.025154523409630.131556656970131
201843.431033975249554.76869844627871.58529324910340.214974329368399
201940.412350370441256.83081467638812.367218711144140.389616242026501
202038.159994004671758.04051180601143.231743818897740.567750370419195
202136.482687023119757.82290979168154.749659807251740.944743377947086
202235.771424263388556.44723537863876.184742695971481.59659766200131
202335.244341958146854.64711425652557.622140830414662.48640295491311
Table 3.5 Private Cars by Taxation Year and Fuel Type, 2011-2023

Household Electricity Consumption and Renewable Share in Electricity

Figure 3.4 and Table 3.6 show household metered electricity consumption from 2015 to 2023. Metered electricity consumption by households increased most years from 2016 to 2021 before falling in 2022 and again in 2023. In 2023, household consumption was around 28% of total electricity consumption, compared with 34% in 2015. 

The transition to electric vehicles, the use of electricity for heating buildings, and the proportion of renewable energy used in the generation of electricity are important indicators of the progress towards reducing emissions. Emissions from fossil fuels used to generate electricity were assigned to the final consumer in this release. For households, this includes indirect emissions from electric vehicle charging, household heating from electricity, and other electricity use.

The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) calculates the normalised renewable share in electricity (RES-E), which increased each year from 2016 to 2020 but fell from 39% in 2020 to 36% in 2021, before rising to 37% in 2022 and 39% in 2023 (see Table 3.6).

YearHousehold Electricity Consumption (Terawatt hours)Share of Total Metered Electricity Consumption (%)
20158.3734
20168.39733.1
20178.41432.7
20188.67132.4
20198.33931.5
20209.2334.1
20219.30532.6
20228.76329.4
20238.57928.1
Table 3.6 Household Metered Electricity Consumption, 2015-2023

Environmental Subsidies and Taxes in the Household Sector

Figure 3.5 shows a comparison of environmental taxes paid and environmental subsidies received by the Household sector from 2011 to 2023. Environment taxes paid by the Household sector consist mainly of energy taxes on fuels and transport taxes such as motor tax and vehicle registration tax. Energy efficiency grants are the main component of environmental subsidies to households. In 2023, the Household sector paid €3.0 billion in environment taxes and received €408 million in environmental subsidies. 

Table 3.7 shows the Household sector share of environmental taxes and subsidies between 2011 and 2023. In 2011, the sector share of environment taxes was 67% and the sector share of environmental subsidies was 11%. The share of environment taxes fell to 60% in 2023, while the share of environmental subsidies rose to 22% in 2023. By comparison, the Household share of greenhouse gas emissions was 32% in 2011 and 24% in 2023.

Table 3.7 also contains data on environment taxes paid per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent emitted by the Household sector. In 2023, Households paid €224 per tonne of carbon dioxide, up from €152 in 2011.

Environment taxesEnvironmental subsidies
20112.8010269510.1046268484
20122.8129336070.06499549713
20132.9966190640.05752860952
20143.1235737120.09138836332
20153.2350.102862586
20163.2940.1110109223
20173.370.09397738233
20183.2560.133350895
20193.3090.1921025696
20202.860.190347677
20213.0550.1785460066
20222.7520.273590677
20232.9610.4077475769
Table 3.7 Environmental Subsidies received and Environmental Taxes paid by the Household Sector, 2011-2023