Monday, February 8, 2016

Wind overtakes hydro as third largest power source in EU

13GW of new wind capacity was added to the grid last year compared to only 0.2GW of new hydro power, new EWEA figures show

The wind industry has surpassed the hydro industry as the third largest contributor to the European electriticy grid, and is fast closing the gap on the coal and gas sectors that continue to dominate the continent's power mix.

Wind energy now provides a total of 142GW of capacity in Europe, with 13GW connected to the grid in 2015, according to new figures released today by the European Wind Energy Association (EWEA). Hydro capacity, meanwhile, increased by only 0.2 GW in 2015, taking total capacity to 141GW.

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Gas and coal are still the biggest providers of power in the EU with 192GW and 159GW of installed capacity, respectively.

However, the European wind industry accounted for 44 per cent of all new power installations last year - more than any other technology. New capacity was also 1GW higher than that recorded in 2014. The new additions mean wind power can now meet over 11.4 per cent of Europe's electricity demand. 

“We’re a mature, mainstream, technology now, there’s no doubt about that,” Oliver Joy, public affairs spokesman for the EWEA, told BusinessGreen. “Onshore wind is the cheapest form of new power generation out there: we’re cheaper than gas, coal and other forms of technology. We are now the largest form of renewable energy in the power mix as well.”

EU power mix in 2000 and 2015. Source EWEA

In a repeat of 2014, almost half of the new installed wind capacity was in Germany, where 6GW was installed, bringing the country's total installed wind capacity to 45GW.

However, the story was not quite as rosy for the British wind industry, which installed only 1GW of new wind capacity last year - nearly half the 1.9GW installed in 2014 - taking the country's total to just shy of 14GW. The slowdown meant the UK fell from second place in the European wind energy market league table in 2014 to fourth place in 2015, with Germany, Poland and France - which each installed over 1GW - all connecting more than the UK in 2015.

The figures also show that solar PV added 8.5GW new power to the grid across the bloc, putting it in second place in terms of new capacity added, while coal came in third, delivering 4.7GW of new capacity.


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