Global gas flaring rose for the third consecutive year, surging to 167 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2025 and wasting an estimated $54 billion worth of gas, according to the 2026 Global Flaring Tracker, released by the World Bank Group on Tuesday, June 23.
The report finds that the 167 bcm flared globally in 2025 exceeds the volume of liquefied natural gas (LNG) that transited the Persian Gulf that year, a stark measure of the energy value being wasted.
The volume also matches Africa’s entire annual gas consumption, on a continent where energy poverty remains a significant barrier to economic development.
In effect, oil producers are burning a valuable resource that could support energy access, reduce reliance on costly imports, generate much-needed revenue in developing countries, and cut greenhouse gas emissions.
With acute energy challenges persisting across much of the world, the scale of this missed opportunity demands urgent attention from policymakers, operators, and investors.
Published annually by the World Bank’s Global Flaring and Methane Reduction (GFMR) Partnership, in collaboration with the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines, the report provides a comprehensive and independent assessment of global gas flaring volumes, intensity, and trends.
Nine countries—Russia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico, Libya, Algeria, Nigeria, and the United States—account for more than four-fifths of global flaring while producing nearly half of the world’s oil.
“At a time when many countries are struggling to increase affordable and reliable energy, the economic development costs of continued flaring are simply too high,” said Demetrios Papathanasiou, World Bank Group Global Director for Energy.
“The gas currently being flared could be captured to power industries and businesses, create jobs, and strengthen energy security.”
Many countries import costly gas while simultaneously flaring vast amounts of it at their oilfields. Eliminating routine flaring globally would require an estimated $70–100 billion—less than twice the annual value of the gas currently being wasted.
Countries facing high import costs and domestic energy shortfalls stand to benefit from increased energy access, new gas revenues, and lower energy bills. Yet despite the tools needed to end routine flaring being well established, the practice persists. What holds back progress is not technical capability but structural challenges, including inadequate regulation, insufficient capital, limited market infrastructure, and a failure by operators and governments to prioritize flaring reduction.
Where effective policies and regulations, targeted investment, and strong leadership come together, flaring declines.
Governments and operators that act decisively achieve results. For instance, Kazakhstan has reduced flaring by 87% since 2012, including a further 16% reduction in 2025 alone.
“The technologies, policies, regulations, and financing mechanisms needed to capture and utilize associated gas are available. What is missing, in too many places, is the leadership, prioritization, and governance needed to put these solutions into practice and create access to markets and infrastructure. The cost of inaction will be measured in billions of dollars in lost revenue and continued energy insecurity for millions of people,” said Zubin Bamji, World Bank Manager for the Global Flaring and Methane Reduction (GFMR) Partnership.


