EU 2011 new wind capacity over 21% of total installed power: EWEA
Brussels (Platts)--6Feb2012/734 am EST/1234 GMT
EU wind power capacity accounted for just over 21% of all newly
installed power capacity in 2011, European wind energy association EWEA said
Monday.
"In 2011, 9,616 MW of wind energy capacity was installed in the EU,
making a total of 93,957 MW--enough to supply 6.3% of the EU's electricity,"
EWEA said in a statement.
More renewable power capacity was installed during 2011 than any other
year. Wind power accounted for 21.4% of total 2011 power capacity
installations while overall renewable power installations accounted for
71.3%, an increase of 37.7% on 2010 installations, EWEA said.
Growth in newly installed capacity in the wind sector over the last 17
years has remained constant, with an average annual growth rate of 15.6% from
1995 to 2011.
Article continues below...
|
|
Platts 3rd Annual European Power Generation conference
26th-27th April 2012, The Hilton, Amsterdam, Netherlands
|
|
|
Platts 3rd Annual European Power Generation conference will explore these and further questions with concrete examples from the field, bringing together the major investment players in each technology as well as from the policy, funding and advisory side.
- Delivering Europe's low carbon revolution -- Are we on track?
- Demand, price and policy -- Wait-and-see on big-ticket high-risk items
- The regulatory landscape -- Where is policy helping, where is it hindering?
- Technology focus: renewables, new nuclear, gas, coal, and CCS progress
|
|
2010 figures were at similar levels to 2011, at 9,648 MW. Both fuel oil
and nuclear power saw a drop in 2011, with more capacity decommissioned than
installed, EWEA said.
"Despite the economic crisis gripping Europe, the wind industry is still
installing solid levels of new capacity," EWEA policy director Justin Wilkes
said.
A decrease in new installations in more mature wind markets such as
France and Spain was offset by growth in onshore installations in Germany and
Sweden, offshore installations in the UK, and continuing strong performances
from emerging onshore markets such as Romania, EWEA said.
Overall, Germany remains the EU country with the largest installed
capacity, followed by Spain, France, Italy and the UK.
Last year, the EU's total installed net power capacity increased by
35,468 MW to 895,878 MW, with wind power increasing its share of installed
capacity to 10.5%, and renewable capacity increasing its share to 31.1%.
Since 2000, 28.2% of new capacity installed has been wind power, 47.8%
renewables, and 90.8% renewables and gas combined, EWEA said.
--Jane Morecroft, newsdesk@platts.com