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Billions of people have access to far less electricity per day than is required to run an air conditioner for just one hour.
Hannah Ritchie
How much plastic ends up in the ocean? Where does it come from?
Hannah Ritchie, Veronika Samborska, and Max Roser
Fast growth rates result in significant pain and suffering for chickens. Selecting slower-growing breeds would reduce some of this suffering.
Hannah Ritchie
Explore patterns of religious affiliation, participation, and belief, across countries and over time.
Hannah Ritchie, Lucas Rodés-Guirao, Pablo Arriagada, and Esteban Ortiz-Ospina
Billions of people have access to far less electricity per day than is required to run an air conditioner for just one hour.
Hannah Ritchie
Fast growth rates result in significant pain and suffering for chickens. Selecting slower-growing breeds would reduce some of this suffering.
Hannah Ritchie
How much plastic ends up in the ocean? Where does it come from?
Hannah Ritchie, Veronika Samborska, and Max Roser
Explore patterns of religious affiliation, participation, and belief, across countries and over time.
Hannah Ritchie, Lucas Rodés-Guirao, Pablo Arriagada, and Esteban Ortiz-Ospina
Explore updated data on foreign aid from the OECD.
Read moreWe’ve updated our charts with the latest data on multidimensional poverty.
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Read moreBite-sized insights on how the world is changing, published every few days.
Today
Debates over whether religion is booming or dying are common. What does the data say?
Most countries lack long-term data on religious identity, but results from thePew Research Center offer insights into changes over the decade from 2010 to 2020. (Unfortunately, 2020 is the most recent year for which we have comparable global data.)
At a global level, there was barely any change. The share of people identifying with any religion dropped by just one percentage point, from 77% to 76%.
But religious affiliation did drop significantly across many countries in Europe, the Americas, and Oceania. You can see this drop for a selection of countries in the chart.
In Australia, rates dropped from 75% to 58%. In the United States and Chile, the percentage has decreased from roughly 85% to 70%.
So while religious affiliation isstable in many parts of the world, this data shows religion is becoming less prominent in others.
Note that this data is based on self-identification with any religion; it doesn’t tell us about changes in practices or rituals, such as prayer or attending services.
February 14
This chart shows one way to compare automated manufacturing across countries — it plots the number of robots per 1,000 manufacturing employees.
The chart shows very large differences between countries. South Korea stands out, with more than one robot for every ten manufacturing workers.
Singapore comes second, and China ranks third, close to Germany. The United States sits in the middle, close to the European average, below Switzerland, Denmark and Slovenia.
This perspective shows industrial robot adoption in relative terms.In another Data Insight, I looked at robot adoption in absolute terms. From that perspective, China stands out by a large margin: it’s a large economy with a huge manufacturing sector, and it has by far the largest stock of industrial robots.
Much of this expansion has happened recently: China’s annual installationsincreased 12-foldover a decade, helping it catch up to South Korea in terms of robots per worker.
February 12
Most people in the world are religious. Whenasked whether they identify withany religion, three-quarters of respondents choose one.
But in the chart, you can see huge differences in rates of religious affiliation across the world. In some countries, such as India and Pakistan, it’s almost universal: almost everyone identifies with a religion.
The opposite is true in China, where just one in ten people does. Several countries in East Asia, in particular, have particularly low rates of religious identification compared to other regions.
This doesn’t necessarily mean these populations holdno religious beliefs; they maystill engage in activities that can be considered religious or spiritual, even though they don't describe themselves as belonging to any one in particular.
February 10
It might seem odd that countries would agree to import plasticwaste from other countries, but many do so for the cheap materials or to feed specific manufacturing processes.
Environmentally, the trade in plastics has often been a concern, as it allows rich countries to effectively “dump” waste on poorer countries withweaker waste management systems.
The good news is that trade in plastic waste has fallen by more than two-thirds over the last decade. You can see this reduction in the chart.
China has been the biggest driver of this. It was once a large importer, but after a steep decline in trade in 2016 anda ban in 2018, many countries lost their largest export market.
In 2024, around 5 million tonnes of plastic waste were traded worldwide. For context, that is around 1% of the total plastic waste generated. What’s perhaps surprising is that most trade is nowbetween high-income countries, which reduces the risk that this waste leaks into the environment.
February 07
Industrial robots are rapidly becoming a common part of manufacturing in some countries. The chart here shows how many new ones are installed each year in the industrialized countries for which we have available data from the International Federation of Robotics (IFR).
In this dataset, industrial robots are defined as automatically controlled, reprogrammable, and multipurpose machines used in industrial settings. The data covers only physical industrial robots, not software or consumer technologies.
The chart shows that in 2011, China, the United States, Japan, Germany, and South Korea were all installing similar numbers of these robots. However, in the decade that followed, the paths of these countries diverged. By 2023, annual installations in China had risen to 276,000 robots, a twelvefold increase.
Over the same period, installations in the United States, Japan, Germany, and South Korea also increased, but much more slowly: none of them even doubled. The United States, which saw the second-largest rise, went from 21,000 new installations in 2011 to 38,000 in 2023.
These figures refer tonew robots installed each year; that is, annual additions to the existing stock of robots. The IFR also publishes data on the total number of robots in operation, andby this measure, China also had the largest installed base, at around 1.76 million robots in 2023.
Relative to its large manufacturing sector, China’s stock of robots todaydoes not stand out – but the data here shows that this is changing quickly.
February 05
Most of ourwork on war and peace focuses on the people killed directly in the fighting. But war has many other costs: it worsens people’s health, leaves them without work, and pushes them out of their homes.
The chart shows this for the civil war in Syria. Since the war began in 2011, more than 400,000 people have been killed in the fighting. At the same time, annual deaths increased as more people died from other causes. Young children were especially affected: estimates suggest that the number of annual child deaths more than doubled.
The war has also forced millions of people to leave their homes: in total, more than seven million are displaced within Syria, and almost as many are refugeeselsewhere.
It also became much harder for people to make a living. Average living standards, measured by GDP per capita, have more than halved since the war began. As a result, poverty and hunger have risen sharply.
These numbers come with uncertainty because conflict makes it hard and dangerous to collect data.
This shows that to understand the costs of war, we need to have a broad perspective and see its impacts on health, displacement, and living standards.
February 03
Three-quarters of people worldwidesay they are religious. But rates of religious identity can vary a lot across countries, and so do the particular religions people follow.
In the map, you can see the most common religious affiliation for each country. This can include the “unaffiliated” who do not identify with any specific religion. This data is sourced from thePew Research Center and is based on how people describe their own identity, regardless of their particular practices or beliefs.
As you can see, Christianity is the most common across much of Europe, the Americas, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Islam is the most common across North Africa and the Middle East, while Hinduism and Buddhism dominate across much of South Asia.
In East Asian countries such as China, Japan, and South Korea, the religiouslyunaffiliated are the biggest group. That doesn’t mean these populations holdno religious beliefs; they maystill engage in activities that can be considered religious or spiritual, but they don’t describe themselves as belonging to any one in particular.
Featured data from our collection of 13,905 interactive charts.
What could be more tragic than the death of a young child? Child mortality, the death of children under the age of five, is stillextremely common in our world today.
The historical data makes clear that it doesn’t have to be this way: itis possible for societies to protect their children and reduce child mortality to very low rates. For child mortality to reach low levels, many things have to go right at the same time:good healthcare,good nutrition,clean water and sanitation,maternal health, and highliving standards. We can, therefore, think ofchild mortality as a proxy indicator of a country’s living conditions.
The chart shows our long-run data on child mortality, which allows you to see how child mortality has changed in countries around the world.

Interactive visualization tools to explore a wide range of related indicators.
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