2026-01-11 21:02:00
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Bulgaria joined the eurozone on January 1st, departing from its national currency, the lev, whose name translates to “lion.”.
Introduced in 1999 and entering circulation in 2002, the euro is the world’s second-largest reserve currency. While 21 of the European Union’s 27 member states use the euro, six do not, including Denmark, Sweden, Poland, Hungary, Romania, and Czechia.
This graphic shows the currencies of Europe, based on data from Eurail.
Below, we show currencies used across the continent of Europe:
| Country | Currency |
|---|---|
Austria |
Euro |
Belgium |
Euro |
Bulgaria |
Euro |
Croatia |
Euro |
Cyprus |
Euro |
Estonia |
Euro |
Finland |
Euro |
France |
Euro |
Germany |
Euro |
Greece |
Euro |
Ireland |
Euro |
Italy |
Euro |
Latvia |
Euro |
Lithuania |
Euro |
Luxembourg |
Euro |
Malta |
Euro |
Netherlands |
Euro |
Portugal |
Euro |
Slovakia |
Euro |
Slovenia |
Euro |
Spain |
Euro |
Albania |
Lek |
Belarus |
Ruble |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Mark |
Czech Republic |
Koruna |
Denmark |
Krone |
Hungary |
Forint |
Iceland |
Króna |
North Macedonia |
Denar |
Norway |
Krone |
Poland |
Złoty |
Romania |
Leu |
Russia |
Ruble |
Serbia |
Dinar |
Sweden |
Krona |
Switzerland |
Franc |
Turkey |
Lira |
Ukraine |
Hryvnia |
United Kingdom |
Pound Sterling |
In total, 21 countries use the euro, covering a population of 350 million people.
Back in 1999, there were 11 countries to first adopt the euro, including Germany, Spain, and Austria. Later, in 2001, Greece adopted the currency, then countries including Slovenia and Malta transitioned over the decade.
While Bulgaria is the most recent country to adopt the currency, it has not been met without controversy. Supporters argue the move could boost trade and deepen economic integration, particularly amid ongoing geopolitical tensions stemming from the Russia–Ukraine war.
Opponents, however, fear the euro could drive inflation. While historical evidence suggests euro adoption has not led to sustained inflation over time, public opinion in Bulgaria remains roughly split.
Of the countries that use their own currency in Europe, Russia is the largest by population, at 146 million. Other post-Soviet states also fall into this category, including Belarus and Ukraine.
In contrast, three countries out of the 15 post-Soviet nations have adopted the euro since the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania transitioning between 2011 and 2015.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on Europe population forecasts to 2100.
2026-01-11 03:49:17
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Crude oil is not a uniform product. Its quality varies widely by region, shaping everything from refinery design to global trade flows.
This visualization compares Venezuela’s oil with the world’s most traded crude blends.
The data for this visualization comes from a combination of sources, including Saudi Aramco, ExxonMobil, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), S&P Global, PEMEX, and the Canada Energy Regulator. It compares major global crude grades using API gravity, crude type, and sulfur content to show how oil quality differs around the world.
API gravity measures how heavy or light crude oil is compared to water. Oils above 10° API are lighter and float, while those below 10° API are heavier and sink. In general, lighter crudes are easier to refine into fuels like gasoline and diesel. Heavy crude oils typically produce more residual products, such as asphalt.
Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves, but most of its production consists of heavy and extra-heavy crude.
The country’s flagship blend Merey 16 has API gravity well below 20°. The oil is also sour, meaning it contains high sulfur levels.
| Top Producer | Grade | API Gravity | Crude Type | Sweet / Sour |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Saudi Arabia |
Arab Super Light | 50° | Extra Light | Sweet |
Malaysia |
Tapis | 45.8° | Extra Light | Sweet |
U.S. |
Eagle Ford | 45° | Extra Light | Sweet |
Algeria |
Saharan Blend | 43.2° | Extra Light | Sweet |
U.S. |
WTI | 40° | Light | Sweet |
UK, Norway |
Brent Blend | 40° | Light | Sweet |
Nigeria |
Bonny Light | 37° | Light | Sweet |
Oman |
Oman Crude | 33.2° | Medium | Sour |
Russia |
Urals | 31.7° | Medium | Sour |
UAE, Oman |
Dubai (Fateh) | 31° | Medium | Sour |
U.S. |
Mars Blend | 28.5° | Medium | Sour |
Venezuela |
Mesa 30 | 29.1° | Medium | Sour |
Mexico |
Maya | 21° | Heavy | Sour |
Canada |
Western Canadian Select | 21° | Heavy | Sour |
Colombia |
Castilla | 18.8° | Heavy | Sour |
Venezuela |
Hamaca | 17° | Heavy | Sour |
Venezuela |
Merey 16 | 15.9° | Heavy | Sour |
Venezuela |
Boscan | 10.1° | Extra Heavy | Sour |
Canada |
Athabasca Bitumen | 8° | Extra Heavy | Sour |
Because of these characteristics, Venezuelan crude requires complex and expensive refining processes. Only a limited number of refineries globally are equipped to handle such heavy feedstocks efficiently.
Many of the world’s most traded crude oils—such as Brent, WTI, and Arab Light—are light and sweet. With API gravities near or above 40° and low sulfur content (sweet), these crudes are cheaper to process and yield higher proportions of valuable fuels. This makes them attractive benchmarks for global pricing.
Extra-light crudes like Arab Super Light and Tapis sit at the top of the quality spectrum. Their high API gravity and low sulfur content allow refiners to maximize output with minimal processing complexity.
Despite its challenges, heavy crude still plays an important role in global markets. U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, for example, were specifically configured with cokers and other complex units to process high-sulfur, low-API crude crude oils from countries like Venezuela, Mexico, and Canada.
Venezuela is geographically closer to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries than Canada, but most of its crude is heavy and costly to produce. Historically, U.S. refiners purchased significant volumes of Venezuelan heavy crude before sanctions reduced those flows, and Canadian heavy crude has since become the largest foreign heavy crude supply to the U.S. market.
At its peak in the 1970s, Venezuela produced around 3.5 million barrels per day, representing more than 7% of global oil output at the time.
Since then, production has declined sharply due to underinvestment, infrastructure decay, and geopolitical pressures, including sanctions.
Today, Venezuela’s output averages around 1 million barrels per day, or about 1 % of global supply.
Despite the collapse in production, Chevron continues to operate in Venezuela through joint ventures, maintaining a presence that few other U.S. oil majors have preserved amid sanctions and nationalizations.
Venezuela was also a founding member of OPEC in 1960, alongside Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. However, its influence within the group has diminished as production declined and its ability to meet export commitments weakened.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out All of the World’s Oil Reserves by Country, in One Visualization on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-01-11 01:34:13
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Beer remains one of the world’s most widely consumed alcoholic beverages, deeply tied to cultural traditions, social habits, and national identity in many countries.
This infographic ranks countries by their beer consumption per capita in 2024, based on data from Kirin Holdings, which tracks global alcohol consumption trends annually.
Czechia tops global per-capita beer consumption for the 32nd year in a row, although consumption has been declining for the last two years. Beer has deep historical roots in Czechia stretching back to the 10th century, when brewing first began at the Břevnov Monastery.
The table below shows the top 35 countries by beer consumption per person in 2024:
| Rank | Country | Per Capita Consumption (Liters) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Czechia |
148.8 |
| 2 |
Lithuania |
110.6 |
| 3 |
Austria |
104.6 |
| 4 |
Ireland |
99.0 |
| 5 |
Croatia |
95.1 |
| 6 |
Estonia |
93.2 |
| 7 |
Spain |
91.8 |
| 8 |
Slovenia |
88.4 |
| 9 |
Romania |
87.4 |
| 10 |
Germany |
86.9 |
| 11 |
Panama |
86.1 |
| 12 |
Mexico |
83.4 |
| 13 |
Poland |
83.2 |
| 14 |
Bulgaria |
81.4 |
| 15 |
Slovakia |
81.0 |
| 16 |
Gabon |
80.9 |
| 17 |
Latvia |
79.1 |
| 18 |
South Africa |
75.2 |
| 19 |
Hungary |
74.1 |
| 20 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
71.4 |
| 21 |
Brazil |
70.3 |
| 22 |
Finland |
68.7 |
| 23 |
Portugal |
66.9 |
| 24 |
United Kingdom |
66.3 |
| 25 |
Netherlands |
66.2 |
| 26 |
Namibia |
66.1 |
| 27 |
Russia |
66.1 |
| 28 |
Serbia |
65.5 |
| 29 |
United States |
65.4 |
| 30 |
Australia |
65.0 |
| 31 |
Puerto Rico |
61.8 |
| 32 |
Denmark |
60.8 |
| 33 |
Belgium |
57.4 |
| 34 |
Norway |
55.8 |
| 35 |
Laos |
55.2 |
The average Czech drinks 148.8 liters of beer annually, amounting to around 419 standard bottles (355 ml, or 0.75 pints)—double that of many top beer-consuming nations.
Lithuania and Austria follow, each exceeding 100 liters per capita, along with Ireland, home of Guinness. Croatia rounds out the top five countries, which are unchanged from 2023.
While Europe dominates the ranking, beer is also popular in Latin America, with Mexico, Panama, Brazil, and Puerto Rico among the top beer-consuming countries. Notably, Brazil is also the world’s third-largest beer consumer in absolute terms, behind China and the United States.
Countries with strong beer traditions often combine cultural acceptance, local production, and affordability. In contrast, regions where spirits or wine dominate tend to show lower beer consumption.
Demographics also play a role, with aging populations and younger generations drinking less alcohol overall.
If you enjoyed today’s post, explore more food, beverage, and lifestyle insights on Voronoi, including The Most Popular Beer in Every U.S. State.
2026-01-10 23:24:37
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Beer remains one of the world’s most popular alcoholic beverages. While per-capita drinking often gets the spotlight, total consumption tells a different story, shaped by population size, economic growth, and shifting consumer habits.
This visualization ranks nations by the total volume of beer consumed in 2024. The data for this graphic comes from Kirin Holdings.
China remains the world’s largest beer market by a wide margin, consuming 40.5 billion liters—nearly 21% of global demand.
Despite its size, China’s beer consumption fell by 3.7% year over year. The United States ranks second at 22.3 billion liters, accounting for 11.5% of the global market. Similar to China, U.S. beer consumption edged lower, continuing a long-term trend toward moderation and alternative beverages.
| Rank | Country | Billion liters | Global Market Share | Growth (2023-24) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
China |
40.5 | 20.9% | -3.7% |
| 2 |
United States of America |
22.3 | 11.5% | -0.5% |
| 3 |
Brazil |
15.3 | 7.9% | 1.1% |
| 4 |
Mexico |
10.8 | 5.6% | 5.4% |
| 5 |
Russia |
9.5 | 4.9% | 9.0% |
| 6 |
Germany |
7.2 | 3.7% | -2.2% |
| 7 |
South Africa |
4.6 | 2.4% | 4.5% |
| 8 |
Vietnam |
4.6 | 2.4% | 0.6% |
| 9 |
United Kingdom |
4.5 | 2.3% | 1.7% |
| 10 |
Spain |
4.4 | 2.2% | -1.3% |
| 11 |
Japan |
4.1 | 2.1% | -2.7% |
| 12 |
India |
3.4 | 1.8% | 14.6% |
| 13 |
Poland |
3.3 | 1.7% | -1.7% |
| 14 |
Colombia |
2.6 | 1.4% | 3.2% |
| 15 |
South Korea |
2.3 | 1.2% | 0.7% |
| 16 |
Italy |
2.2 | 1.1% | 0.9% |
| 17 |
France |
2.1 | 1.1% | -1.0% |
| 18 |
Thailand |
2.0 | 1.0% | 5.8% |
| 19 |
Canada |
1.8 | 0.9% | -0.1% |
| 20 |
Australia |
1.7 | 0.9% | -2.6% |
| 21 |
Ethiopia |
1.7 | 0.9% | 5.1% |
| 22 |
Romania |
1.7 | 0.9% | 2.0% |
| 23 |
Philippines |
1.7 | 0.9% | 0.3% |
| 24 |
Ukraine |
1.7 | 0.9% | 3.0% |
| 25 |
Czechia |
1.6 | 0.8% | -0.9% |
| -- |
Rest of world |
36.4 | 18.7% | -- |
| -- |
Global Total |
194.1 | 100.0% | 0.5% |
Several emerging markets posted notable gains in beer consumption. India recorded the fastest growth among major countries, with volumes rising 14.6% as incomes increase and beer becomes more popular among younger consumers.
Mexico and Russia also stood out, growing by 5.4% and 9.0% respectively.
Europe remains a key beer-producing and consuming region, but trends vary widely by country.
Germany, the world’s sixth-largest beer market, saw consumption decline by 2.2%, while Czechia—famous for having the highest per-capita beer intake—also posted a modest drop.
In contrast, countries like the UK, Italy, and Romania experienced mild growth.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The Most Popular Beer in Every U.S. State on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-01-10 21:05:08
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This map shows the average annual temperature for countries and territories around the world.
The data for this visualization comes from the World Bank Group via Wikipedia, based on Climatic Research Unit gridded climatology data. Average yearly temperature reflects the mean of daily minimum and maximum temperatures for each country from 1991 to 2020.
Important caveat: this is showing the geographical mean temperature, and it is not based on where people live in a given country. As an example, Russia and Canada have massive portions of remote, Arctic land that count towards this mean, even though population centers tend to exist in more temperate regions within these landmasses.Burkina Faso tops the global ranking with an average annual temperature of 30.4°C. Mali, Senegal, Mauritania, Djibouti, and Gambia also rank among the hottest countries worldwide. In total, six of the 10 hottest countries are located in Africa.
Much of this heat concentration is driven by geography. Large portions of the continent sit near the equator or within arid and semi-arid climate zones, where high solar radiation and limited cloud cover push temperatures higher year-round.
| Rank | Country or Entity | Continent | Temperature |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Burkina Faso |
Africa | 30.40 °C (86.72 °F) |
| 2 |
Mali |
Africa | 29.21 °C (84.58 °F) |
| 3 |
Aruba |
South America | 29.17 °C (84.51 °F) |
| 4 |
Senegal |
Africa | 28.90 °C (84.02 °F) |
| 5 |
Mauritania |
Africa | 28.82 °C (83.88 °F) |
| 6 |
Tokelau |
Oceania | 28.71 °C (83.68 °F) |
| 7 |
Tuvalu |
Oceania | 28.62 °C (83.52 °F) |
| 8 |
Djibouti |
Africa | 28.49 °C (83.28 °F) |
| 9 |
Curaçao |
North America | 28.40 °C (83.12 °F) |
| 10 |
Gambia |
Africa | 28.38 °C (83.08 °F) |
| 11 |
United Arab Emirates |
Asia | 28.17 °C (82.71 °F) |
| 12 |
Maldives |
Asia | 28.11 °C (82.60 °F) |
| 13 |
Niger |
Africa | 28.04 °C (82.47 °F) |
| 14 |
Benin |
Africa | 28.02 °C (82.44 °F) |
| 15 |
Qatar |
Asia | 28.02 °C (82.44 °F) |
| 16 |
Marshall Islands |
Oceania | 28.01 °C (82.42 °F) |
| 17 |
Guinea-Bissau |
Africa | 27.98 °C (82.36 °F) |
| 18 |
South Sudan |
Africa | 27.97 °C (82.35 °F) |
| 19 |
Sudan |
Africa | 27.95 °C (82.31 °F) |
| 20 |
Palau |
Oceania | 27.90 °C (82.22 °F) |
| 21 |
Nauru |
Oceania | 27.83 °C (82.09 °F) |
| 22 |
Cayman Islands |
North America | 27.82 °C (82.08 °F) |
| 23 |
Guam |
Oceania | 27.81 °C (82.06 °F) |
| 24 |
Kiribati |
Oceania | 27.77 °C (81.99 °F) |
| 25 |
Anguilla |
North America | 27.71 °C (81.88 °F) |
| 26 |
Saint Martin |
North America | 27.71 °C (81.88 °F) |
| 27 |
Sint Maarten |
North America | 27.71 °C (81.88 °F) |
| 28 |
Bahrain |
Asia | 27.69 °C (81.84 °F) |
| 29 |
Singapore |
Asia | 27.68 °C (81.82 °F) |
| 30 |
Ghana |
Africa | 27.66 °C (81.79 °F) |
| 31 |
Oman |
Asia | 27.64 °C (81.75 °F) |
| 32 |
Chad |
Africa | 27.63 °C (81.73 °F) |
| 33 |
British Indian Ocean Territory |
Africa | 27.61 °C (81.70 °F) |
| 34 |
Northern Mariana Islands |
Oceania | 27.60 °C (81.68 °F) |
| 35 |
Samoa |
Oceania | 27.58 °C (81.64 °F) |
| 36 |
Caribbean Netherlands |
North America | 27.47 °C (81.45 °F) |
| 37 |
Saint Kitts and Nevis |
North America | 27.47 °C (81.45 °F) |
| 38 |
Cambodia |
Asia | 27.41 °C (81.34 °F) |
| 39 |
American Samoa |
Oceania | 27.38 °C (81.28 °F) |
| 40 |
Togo |
Africa | 27.33 °C (81.19 °F) |
| 41 |
Nigeria |
Africa | 27.30 °C (81.14 °F) |
| 42 |
Wallis and Futuna |
Oceania | 27.30 °C (81.14 °F) |
| 43 |
Federated States of Micronesia |
Oceania | 27.28 °C (81.10 °F) |
| 44 |
Sri Lanka |
Asia | 27.25 °C (81.05 °F) |
| 45 |
Antigua and Barbuda |
North America | 27.20 °C (80.96 °F) |
| 46 |
Seychelles |
Africa | 27.09 °C (80.76 °F) |
| 47 |
Saint Lucia |
North America | 27.00 °C (80.60 °F) |
| 48 |
United States Virgin Islands |
North America | 26.98 °C (80.56 °F) |
| 49 |
Brunei |
Asia | 26.95 °C (80.51 °F) |
| 50 |
Somalia |
Africa | 26.95 °C (80.51 °F) |
| 51 |
Thailand |
Asia | 26.85 °C (80.33 °F) |
| 52 |
Dominica |
North America | 26.83 °C (80.29 °F) |
| 53 |
Ivory Coast |
Africa | 26.80 °C (80.24 °F) |
| 54 |
Cocos (Keeling) Islands |
Oceania | 26.79 °C (80.22 °F) |
| 55 |
British Virgin Islands |
North America | 26.70 °C (80.06 °F) |
| 56 |
Eritrea |
Africa | 26.63 °C (79.93 °F) |
| 57 |
Barbados |
North America | 26.61 °C (79.90 °F) |
| 58 |
Suriname |
South America | 26.58 °C (79.84 °F) |
| 59 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
North America | 26.55 °C (79.79 °F) |
| 60 |
Sierra Leone |
Africa | 26.54 °C (79.77 °F) |
| 61 |
Grenada |
North America | 26.49 °C (79.68 °F) |
| 62 |
Malaysia |
Asia | 26.38 °C (79.48 °F) |
| 63 |
Kuwait |
Asia | 26.31 °C (79.36 °F) |
| 64 |
Turks and Caicos Islands |
North America | 26.29 °C (79.32 °F) |
| 65 |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines |
North America | 26.17 °C (79.11 °F) |
| 66 |
Guyana |
South America | 26.12 °C (79.02 °F) |
| 67 |
Christmas Island |
Oceania | 26.06 °C (78.91 °F) |
| 68 |
Indonesia |
Asia | 25.96 °C (78.73 °F) |
| 69 |
Saudi Arabia |
Asia | 25.94 °C (78.69 °F) |
| 70 |
Solomon Islands |
Oceania | 25.92 °C (78.66 °F) |
| 71 |
Jamaica |
North America | 25.91 °C (78.64 °F) |
| 72 |
Nicaragua |
Central America | 25.88 °C (78.58 °F) |
| 73 |
Guinea |
Africa | 25.86 °C (78.55 °F) |
| 74 |
Cuba |
North America | 25.81 °C (78.46 °F) |
| 75 |
Montserrat |
North America | 25.75 °C (78.35 °F) |
| 76 |
Bangladesh |
Asia | 25.71 °C (78.28 °F) |
| 77 |
Venezuela |
South America | 25.71 °C (78.28 °F) |
| 78 |
Belize |
Central America | 25.70 °C (78.26 °F) |
| 79 |
Panama |
Central America | 25.60 °C (78.08 °F) |
| 80 |
Bahamas |
North America | 25.58 °C (78.04 °F) |
| 81 |
Yemen |
Asia | 25.54 °C (77.97 °F) |
| 82 |
Central African Republic |
Africa | 25.47 °C (77.85 °F) |
| 83 |
Liberia |
Africa | 25.45 °C (77.81 °F) |
| 84 |
Brazil |
South America | 25.44 °C (77.79 °F) |
| 85 |
El Salvador |
Central America | 25.23 °C (77.41 °F) |
| 86 |
Gabon |
Africa | 25.20 °C (77.36 °F) |
| 87 |
Kenya |
Africa | 25.08 °C (77.14 °F) |
| 88 |
Puerto Rico |
North America | 25.04 °C (77.07 °F) |
| 89 |
Niue |
Oceania | 25.03 °C (77.05 °F) |
| 90 |
Tonga |
Oceania | 25.01 °C (77.02 °F) |
| 91 |
Colombia |
South America | 25.00 °C (77.00 °F) |
| 92 |
United States Minor Outlying Islands |
Oceania and North America | 24.97 °C (76.95 °F) |
| 93 |
Haiti |
North America | 24.95 °C (76.91 °F) |
| 94 |
India |
Asia | 24.94 °C (76.89 °F) |
| 95 |
Costa Rica |
Central America | 24.83 °C (76.69 °F) |
| 96 |
Cameroon |
Africa | 24.80 °C (76.64 °F) |
| 97 |
Vietnam |
Asia | 24.79 °C (76.62 °F) |
| 98 |
Republic of the Congo |
Africa | 24.74 °C (76.53 °F) |
| 99 |
Papua New Guinea |
Oceania | 24.74 °C (76.53 °F) |
| 100 |
Honduras |
Central America | 24.72 °C (76.50 °F) |
| 101 |
Cook Islands |
Oceania | 24.71 °C (76.48 °F) |
| 102 |
Fiji |
Oceania | 24.68 °C (76.42 °F) |
| 103 |
Equatorial Guinea |
Africa | 24.66 °C (76.39 °F) |
| 104 |
Timor-Leste |
Asia | 24.57 °C (76.23 °F) |
| 105 |
Dominican Republic |
North America | 24.55 °C (76.19 °F) |
| 106 |
São Tomé and Príncipe |
Africa | 24.49 °C (76.08 °F) |
| 107 |
Vanuatu |
Oceania | 24.44 °C (75.99 °F) |
| 108 |
Mozambique |
Africa | 24.41 °C (75.94 °F) |
| 109 |
Democratic Republic of the Congo |
Africa | 24.35 °C (75.83 °F) |
| 110 |
French Polynesia |
Oceania | 24.30 °C (75.74 °F) |
| 111 |
Laos |
Asia | 24.16 °C (75.49 °F) |
| 112 |
Paraguay |
South America | 23.92 °C (75.06 °F) |
| 113 |
Myanmar |
Asia | 23.82 °C (74.88 °F) |
| 114 |
Comoros |
Africa | 23.73 °C (74.71 °F) |
| 115 |
Guatemala |
Central America | 23.65 °C (74.57 °F) |
| 116 |
Algeria |
Africa | 23.60 °C (74.48 °F) |
| 117 |
Ethiopia |
Africa | 23.36 °C (74.05 °F) |
| 118 |
Mauritius |
Africa | 23.33 °C (73.99 °F) |
| 119 |
Uganda |
Africa | 23.25 °C (73.85 °F) |
| 120 |
Egypt |
Africa | 23.14 °C (73.65 °F) |
| 121 |
Philippines |
Asia | 23.1 °C (73.6 °F) |
| 122 |
Iraq |
Asia | 22.95 °C (73.31 °F) |
| 123 |
Tanzania |
Africa | 22.92 °C (73.26 °F) |
| 124 |
Libya |
Africa | 22.81 °C (73.06 °F) |
| 125 |
New Caledonia |
Oceania | 22.69 °C (72.84 °F) |
| 126 |
Malawi |
Africa | 22.66 °C (72.79 °F) |
| 127 |
Madagascar |
Africa | 22.64 °C (72.75 °F) |
| 128 |
Cape Verde |
Africa | 22.53 °C (72.55 °F) |
| 129 |
Zambia |
Africa | 22.23 °C (72.01 °F) |
| 130 |
Botswana |
Africa | 22.09 °C (71.76 °F) |
| 131 |
Australia |
Oceania | 22.05 °C (71.69 °F) |
| 132 |
Zimbabwe |
Africa | 21.90 °C (71.42 °F) |
| 133 |
Angola |
Africa | 21.77 °C (71.19 °F) |
| 134 |
Bermuda |
North America | 21.67 °C (71.01 °F) |
| 135 |
Ecuador |
South America | 21.43 °C (70.57 °F) |
| 136 |
Pakistan |
Asia | 21.38 °C (70.48 °F) |
| 137 |
Mexico |
North America | 21.31 °C (70.36 °F) |
| 138 |
Bolivia |
South America | 20.76 °C (69.37 °F) |
| 139 |
Eswatini |
Africa | 20.64 °C (69.15 °F) |
| 140 |
Pitcairn Islands |
Oceania | 20.56 °C (69.01 °F) |
| 141 |
Tunisia |
Africa | 20.53 °C (68.95 °F) |
| 142 |
Burundi |
Africa | 20.51 °C (68.92 °F) |
| 143 |
Namibia |
Africa | 20.45 °C (68.81 °F) |
| 144 |
Israel |
Asia | 20.25 °C (68.45 °F) |
| 145 |
Peru |
South America | 20.07 °C (68.13 °F) |
| 146 |
Malta |
Europe | 20.06 °C (68.11 °F) |
| 147 |
Jordan |
Asia | 20.05 °C (68.09 °F) |
| 148 |
Palestine |
Asia | 20.04 °C (68.07 °F) |
| 149 |
Rwanda |
Africa | 20.03 °C (68.05 °F) |
| 150 |
Norfolk Island |
Oceania | 20.02 °C (68.04 °F) |
| 151 |
Cyprus |
Europe | 20.01 °C (68.02 °F) |
| 152 |
Syria |
Asia | 18.75 °C (65.75 °F) |
| 153 |
Iran |
Asia | 18.34 °C (65.01 °F) |
| 154 |
South Africa |
Africa | 18.23 °C (64.81 °F) |
| 155 |
Gibraltar |
Europe | 18.15 °C (64.67 °F) |
| 156 |
Morocco |
Africa | 18.14 °C (64.65 °F) |
| 157 |
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha |
Africa | 18.10 °C (64.58 °F) |
| 158 |
Uruguay |
South America | 17.97 °C (64.35 °F) |
| 159 |
Turkmenistan |
Asia | 16.66 °C (61.99 °F) |
| 160 |
Argentina |
South America | 16.30 °C (61.34 °F) |
| 161 |
Portugal |
Europe | 15.85 °C (60.53 °F) |
| 162 |
Lebanon |
Asia | 15.45 °C (59.81 °F) |
| 163 |
Vatican City |
Europe | 15.20 °C (59.36 °F) |
| 164 |
Greece |
Europe | 13.17 °C (55.71 °F) |
| 165 |
Spain |
Europe | 13.07 °C (55.53 °F) |
| 166 |
Uzbekistan |
Asia | 13.06 °C (55.51 °F) |
| 167 |
Monaco |
Europe | 13.05 °C (55.49 °F) |
| 168 |
Afghanistan |
Asia | 13.04 °C (55.47 °F) |
| 169 |
Italy |
Europe | 13.02 °C (55.44 °F) |
| 170 |
Azerbaijan |
Asia | 12.96 °C (55.33 °F) |
| 171 |
San Marino |
Europe | 12.83 °C (55.09 °F) |
| 172 |
Albania |
Europe | 12.44 °C (54.39 °F) |
| 173 |
Lesotho |
Africa | 12.38 °C (54.28 °F) |
| 174 |
Jersey |
Europe | 12.27 °C (54.09 °F) |
| 175 |
South Korea |
Asia | 12.22 °C (54.00 °F) |
| 176 |
Guernsey |
Europe | 12.09 °C (53.76 °F) |
| 177 |
Croatia |
Europe | 11.96 °C (53.53 °F) |
| 178 |
Japan |
Asia | 11.78 °C (53.20 °F) |
| 179 |
Turkey |
Asia and Europe | 11.66 °C (52.99 °F) |
| 180 |
France |
Europe | 11.65 °C (52.97 °F) |
| 181 |
Hungary |
Europe | 11.50 °C (52.70 °F) |
| 182 |
Serbia |
Europe | 11.40 °C (52.52 °F) |
| 183 |
Bulgaria |
Europe | 11.35 °C (52.43 °F) |
| 184 |
Moldova |
Europe | 10.89 °C (51.60 °F) |
| 185 |
North Macedonia |
Europe | 10.79 °C (51.42 °F) |
| 186 |
Belgium |
Europe | 10.67 °C (51.21 °F) |
| 187 |
Netherlands |
Europe | 10.49 °C (50.88 °F) |
| 188 |
New Zealand |
Oceania | 10.46 °C (50.83 °F) |
| 189 |
Bhutan |
Asia | 10.38 °C (50.68 °F) |
| 190 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Europe | 10.35 °C (50.63 °F) |
| 191 |
Romania |
Europe | 10.18 °C (50.32 °F) |
| 192 |
Kosovo |
Europe | 10.02 °C (50.04 °F) |
| 193 |
Luxembourg |
Europe | 10.02 °C (50.04 °F) |
| 194 |
Montenegro |
Europe | 9.93 °C (49.87 °F) |
| 195 |
Slovenia |
Europe | 9.86 °C (49.75 °F) |
| 196 |
Ireland |
Europe | 9.73 °C (49.51 °F) |
| 197 |
Isle of Man |
Europe | 9.65 °C (49.37 °F) |
| 198 |
Germany |
Europe | 9.59 °C (49.26 °F) |
| 199 |
United States |
North America | 9.46 °C (49.03 °F) |
| 200 |
Chile |
South America | 9.39 °C (48.90 °F) |
| 201 |
Ukraine |
Europe | 9.27 °C (48.69 °F) |
| 202 |
United Kingdom |
Europe | 9.24 °C (48.63 °F) |
| 203 |
Georgia |
Asia | 9.01 °C (48.22 °F) |
| 204 |
Denmark |
Europe | 8.90 °C (48.02 °F) |
| 205 |
Slovakia |
Europe | 8.83 °C (47.89 °F) |
| 206 |
Poland |
Europe | 8.78 °C (47.80 °F) |
| 207 |
Czech Republic |
Europe | 8.60 °C (47.48 °F) |
| 208 |
Andorra |
Europe | 8.27 °C (46.89 °F) |
| 209 |
Armenia |
Asia | 7.82 °C (46.08 °F) |
| 210 |
China |
Asia | 7.59 °C (45.66 °F) |
| 211 |
Liechtenstein |
Europe | 7.55 °C (45.59 °F) |
| 212 |
Belarus |
Europe | 7.45 °C (45.41 °F) |
| 213 |
Austria |
Europe | 7.44 °C (45.39 °F) |
| 214 |
Lithuania |
Europe | 7.38 °C (45.28 °F) |
| 215 |
Kazakhstan |
Asia | 7.11 °C (44.80 °F) |
| 216 |
North Korea |
Asia | 6.98 °C (44.56 °F) |
| 217 |
Latvia |
Europe | 6.87 °C (44.37 °F) |
| 218 |
Faroe Islands |
Europe | 6.60 °C (43.88 °F) |
| 219 |
Switzerland |
Europe | 6.47 °C (43.65 °F) |
| 220 |
Estonia |
Europe | 6.34 °C (43.41 °F) |
| 221 |
Saint Pierre and Miquelon |
North America | 5.72 °C (42.30 °F) |
| 222 |
French Southern and Antarctic Lands |
Antarctica | 4.11 °C (39.40 °F) |
| 223 |
Tajikistan |
Asia | 3.85 °C (38.93 °F) |
| 224 |
Sweden |
Europe | 3.23 °C (37.81 °F) |
| 225 |
Kyrgyzstan |
Asia | 2.65 °C (36.77 °F) |
| 226 |
Finland |
Europe | 2.46 °C (36.43 °F) |
| 227 |
Heard Island and McDonald Islands |
Antarctica | 2.46 °C (36.43 °F) |
| 228 |
Norway |
Europe | 2.21 °C (35.98 °F) |
| 229 |
Iceland |
Europe | 1.85 °C (35.33 °F) |
| 230 |
Mongolia |
Asia | 1.07 °C (33.93 °F) |
| 231 |
Russia |
Asia and Europe | −3.79 °C (25.18 °F) |
| 232 |
Canada |
North America | −4.03 °C (24.75 °F) |
| 233 |
Svalbard and Jan Mayen |
Europe | −6.78 °C (19.80 °F) |
| 234 |
Greenland |
North America | −18.68 °C (−1.62 °F) |
Beyond Africa, several tropical island nations and Middle Eastern countries also record consistently high temperatures. Places such as Aruba, Tokelau, Tuvalu, and Curaçao average around 28–29°C annually, while countries like Qatar, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates post similar figures.
These regions experience relatively small seasonal temperature swings. Warm ocean waters and desert climates help keep average temperatures elevated throughout the year.
At the opposite end of the spectrum are countries located at high latitudes or with significant polar territory. Greenland has the lowest average annual temperature at −18.7°C, followed by Svalbard and Jan Mayen (Artic territories of Norway), Canada, and Russia.
European countries generally fall in the middle of the ranking, with average temperatures between 8°C and 15°C.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: G20 Greenhouse Gas Emissions per Capita (1990-2024) on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-01-10 08:12:44
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