RUS | ENG | All
Enter the email or login, that you used for registration.
If you do not remember your password, simply leave this field blank and you will receive a new, along with a link to activate.

Not registered yet?
Welcome!

2022-04-05 13:30:00

GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW

GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW

ENERDATA - 5 Apr 2022 - According to the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC), the global wind capacity increased by 93.6 GW in 2021 (+12%), to 837 GW.

Onshore wind installations slowed down with 72.5 GW added in 2021 (-18%), due to lower installations in China and the United States. China installed 30.7 GW of onshore wind capacity in 2021 (-39% compared to 2020), owing to the termination of the feed-in tariff), while the United States only added 12.7 GW (-25%) due to supply chain issues. However, these lower installations in the two largest markets were partly offset by record-high growth in Europe (+14.1 GW, including 2.1 GW in Sweden, 1.9 GW in Germany, and 1.5 GW in Turkey), Latin America (+5.8 GW, including 3.8 GW in Brazil) and Africa and the Middle East (+1.8 GW, including 668 MW in South Africa).

Offshore wind installations soared in 2021 with 21.1 GW installed (three times more than the 6.9 GW installed in 2020), spurred by China (16.9 GW), the United Kingdom (2.3 GW), Denmark (605 MW), the Netherlands (392 MW) and Asian-Pacific countries (excluding China and South Korea, 888 MW). Auctioned capacity rose by 153% in 2021, with 88 GW awarded in 2021, including 69 GW onshore and 19 GW offshore. A significant part was awarded in China (52 GW, including 49 GW of onshore "grid parity projects").

The GWEC expects a significant growth in new installations until 2026 (+6.6%/year), with annual onshore wind installations rising from 72.5 GW in 2021 to 97.4 GW in 2026; annual offshore wind capacity additions should also accelerate, from 21.1 GW in 2021 to 31.4 GW in 2026; overall, wind capacity additions should exceed 100 GW/year as of 2022, reaching 128.8 GW in 2026. China should continue leading installations (41% of total capacity additions in 2026), followed by Europe (14% in 2026) and North America (7% in 2026). 

-----


Earlier:

GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW
2022, April, 1, 11:15:00
GLOBAL CLIMATE DISRUPTION, HAVOC
“Despite growing pledges of climate action, global emissions are at an all-time high,” Mr. Guterres warned. And they continue to rise, he said, adding that “the latest science shows that climate disruption is causing havoc in every region already.
GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW
2022, March, 29, 13:30:00
GLOBAL ENERGY, COMMODITY CRISIS
The sanctions against Russia are the hardest we have seen against any country to date and in particular the decision to freeze $600bn of Russian foreign reserves is a first, which will have huge consequences in the long-term.
GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW
2022, February, 21, 11:50:00
GLOBAL ENERGY CRISIS & STABILISATION
In the situation that has obtained in recent months on energy markets, it has become clear that one of the foundations of stability of the modern global world is, in the first instance, reliable energy supply, which cannot be provided without observing a reasonable balance of energy sources and an absence of discrimination against traditional sectors of the fuel and energy complex.
GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW
2022, January, 19, 10:25:00
GLOBAL RENEWABLES NEED INVESTMENT $3 TLN
The world needs to invest at least $3 trillion in renewable energy in the next 10 years,
GLOBAL WIND CAPACITIES 837 GW
2022, January, 17, 11:45:00
GLOBAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND UP BY 6%, 1 500 TWH
After small drop in 2020, global electricity demand grew by 6% in 2021. It was the largest ever annual increase in absolute terms (over 1 500 TWh) and the largest percentage rise since 2010 after the financial crisis.
All Publications »
Tags: WIND, RENEWABLE