World Bank Climate & Energy

World Bank Climate & Energy MCP Connector for Claude

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Track CO2 emissions, renewable energy usage, deforestation, and electrification rates using official World Bank data.

5 tools Official Updated Jun 28, 2026 Official Vinkius Partner

Turn your AI into a climate change researcher by connecting it directly to the World Bank's environmental metrics.

What you can do

  • Emissions — Track metric tons of CO2 emissions per capita.
  • Renewables — Measure the transition to renewable energy sources globally.
  • Conservation — Map the shrinking or growing forest area relative to land mass.

How it works

  1. Hit subscribe.
  2. Skip the authentication phase entirely (it's open data).
  3. Enable your AI to perform deep climate reporting instantly.

Who is this for?

Environmental scientists, ESG compliance officers, energy analysts, and journalists.

climate-dataco2-emissionsrenewable-energyenvironmental-metricsglobal-developmentsustainability-data

5 tools expose this connector's capabilities to your AI agent.

get_co2_emissions

Get CO2 emissions (metric tons per capita)

get_renewable_energy

Get renewable energy consumption (% of total)

get_electricity_access

Get access to electricity (% of population)

get_forest_area

Get forest area (% of land area)

get_climate_indicator

Get any World Bank climate/energy indicator by code

See how to talk to your AI agent using World Bank Climate & Energy.

What is the renewable energy consumption in Norway compared to the global average?

🌍 **Renewable Energy: Norway vs World** Norway derives over 70% of its total energy from renewable sources — primarily hydropower — vastly exceeding the global average of approximately 18%.

Compare CO2 emissions per capita: USA versus China over the last 20 years.

🌍 **CO2 Per Capita: USA vs China (2004–2024)** The USA's per capita emissions have declined from ~20 to ~14 metric tons. China's have risen from ~4 to ~8 metric tons. While the USA still emits more per person, China's trajectory shows rapid convergence.

How has deforestation progressed in Brazil over the last 30 years?

🌍 **Forest Area: Brazil (1994–2024)** Brazil's forest area has declined from approximately 65% to 59% of total land area over three decades, representing the loss of millions of hectares — though recent policies have begun slowing the rate of deforestation.

Our World Bank Open Data servers require absolutely zero authentication. You do not need to register, get an API key, or setup webhooks. Just instantly connect and your AI agent can begin querying decades of global data.

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