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Energy in Europe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview of energy production, consumption, and policy in Europe
See also:Energy policy of the European Union
This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(March 2024)

Energy in Europe includesenergy, includingelectricity, production, consumption and import inEurope.

Primary energy consumption across European countries, highlights diverse energy use patterns. Countries show fluctuations in consumption, reflecting changes in energy demand and policy. Germany and the Russian Federation are among the highest consumers, smaller economies like Lithuania andTurkmenistan have markedly lower consumption levels. Per person energy use in Europe varies significantly, with smaller nations like Iceland, showing high consumption rates per million people, indicating the diverse energy use and economic activities across the continent. Europe has significant reliance on oil, a major energy source predominantly used for transportation and heating, with most European countries importing most of their oil needs due to limited domestic production.

There has been an increase in renewable energy, with plans to increase wind power capacity. The European Commission's "REPowerEU" plan underscores a commitment to renewables. There is an ongoing transition towards moresustainable energy systems in Europe.

Primary energy consumption by country

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Further information:List of countries by energy consumption and production

Primary energy consumption for selected European and Eurasian countries in milliontonnes of oil equivalent (Mtoe) from 2010 to 2015, according to BP, is listed below.[1]

Country201020112012201320142015
Austria35.933.835.435.133.934.1
Azerbaijan10.711.912.312.613.213.7
Belarus25.925.927.924.724.923.6
Belgium66.061.358.660.055.956.5
Bulgaria17.819.118.116.717.918.9
Czech Republic42.842.141.740.940.139.6
Denmark19.518.517.118.017.516.9
Finland30.928.627.627.226.325.9
France253.2244.5244.7247.4237.5239.0
Germany323.7312.3316.7325.8311.9320.6
Greece31.530.729.327.926.326.3
Hungary24.923.221.720.520.521.5
Ireland15.214.114.013.713.714.6
Italy172.2168.4162.2155.7146.8151.7
Kazakhstan48.555.057.557.457.754.8
Lithuania5.65.85.85.45.25.3
Netherlands96.191.588.486.481.181.6
Norway41.943.047.845.046.447.1
Poland98.298.795.796.092.495.0
Portugal25.624.522.424.524.624.1
Romania33.834.734.031.532.533.1
Russian Federation673.3694.9695.3688.0689.8666.8
Slovakia17.416.816.216.815.515.8
Spain146.2143.1142.4134.2132.1134.4
Sweden52.151.554.751.451.753.0
Switzerland28.727.228.829.728.427.9
Turkey111.0115.0120.2117.6122.8131.3
Turkmenistan25.927.029.726.831.337.3
Ukraine121.0125.7122.6114.7101.085.1
United Kingdom210.5198.8201.9201.4188.9191.2
Uzbekistan43.849.749.248.750.351.6
Other Europe & Eurasia98.696.994.496.194.196.0
Total Europe & Eurasia2948.52934.22934.32898.02832.32834.4

Primary energy consumption per capita (2008)

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This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(March 2024)

The European primary energy use per capita (TWh per million people) in 2008 is listed below.[2]

Primary energy consumption in Europe (2008)[2]
RankcountryTWhpopulation (million)TWh per million people
1Russia7,987141.7956
2Germany3,89982.1247
3France3,09964.1248
4United Kingdom2,42461.3540
5Italy2,04759.8934
6Spain1,61445.5935
7Ukraine1,58346.2634
8Turkey1,14671.0816
9Poland1,13838.1230
10Netherlands92716.4456
11Kazakhstan82515.6853
12Belgium68110.7164
13Sweden5779.2662
14Czech Republic51910.4350
15Romania45821.5121
16Finland4105.3177
17Austria3878.3446
18Greece35411.2431
19Norway3454.7772
20Belarus3279.6834
21Switzerland3117.7140
22Portugal28110.6226
23Bulgaria2307.6230
24Denmark2215.4940
25Ireland1744.4439
26Azerbaijan1558.6818
27Croatia1064.4324
28Estonia631.3447
29Iceland610.32191
30Luxembourg480.4998
31Moldova373.6310
32Armenia353.0811
33Cyprus300.8038
34Malta100.4123

Mtoe = 11.63 TWh primary energy, includes energy losses

Oil

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Oil sources for the European Union with tendency forecast.

Oil is one of the largest primary energy sources in Europe. It is mostly used for transportation and heating.Oil production is relatively low in Europe, with significant production only in the North Sea. Most of Europe's oil comes from imports (about 90% for the EU28).

Fossil gas

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Fossil gas tends to be supplied from north and south.[3]

Electricity

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Renewable energy

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This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(March 2024)

The twelve newer EU Member States in Central and Eastern Europe planned to increasewind power capacity from the 6.4 gigawatts installed at the end of 2012 to 16 gigawatts by 2020.[4][5]

If renewable electricity production in the EU continued to grow at the same rate as it did from 2005 to 2010, it would account for 36.4% of electricity in 2020 and 51.6% in 2030, following:[6][7]

Renewable energy as a percentage of total electricity
20052006200720082009201020202030
13.614.21516.418.2213652

In March 2022, the European Commission released its comprehensive "REPowerEU" plan to promote renewable energy in Europe.[8][9]

Generation and consumption

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2021 Electricity in Europe – Generation and Consumption (GWh)[10]
CountryGenerationConsumptionImportsExportsDistribution losses
TotalNuclearFossil fuelsRenewableHydro-
electric
pumped storage
TotalHydro-
electricity
Geo-
thermal
Tide and waveSolarWindBiomass
and waste
European Union2,753,320696,3411,002,1881,064,830343,4366,177503163,321383,203168,191-10,0392,585,288399,051391,828175,256
Austria64,227013,75252,13538,751002,7226,4604,202-1,66068,53426,43618,8933,236
Belgium94,86447,89224,52122,749393005,56811,6925,096-29883,41315,19423,0703,574
Bulgaria41,52916,48716,9358,3274,819001,4971,421590-22030,3211,85710,6352
Croatia14,60304,24310,4217,1287501492,0581,012-6015,932117,5452
Cyprus4,87804,1007770004772445704,659000
Czechia76,64129,04237,83110,1302,409002,1845944,943-36261,91515,15326,2283,651
Denmark32,79307,16925,62416001,27816,0348,295038,18319,44512,9791,076
Estonia6,65303,4983,15525003057412,08408,8427,3334,704440
Finland69,65322,6309,53437,48915,766003058,18613,232083,72523,9996,7133,215
France530,418360,70448,048123,21058,85713348415,09536,90811,733-1,543447,44724,53269,36938,134
Germany557,14465,441260,790233,00019,252249049,992113,62449,883-2,087511,66051,33670,23726,582
Greece52,474030,83921,6605,909005,10610,471174-2552,1407,5833,8984,020
Hungary34,19115,11012,0936,9882021203,8966452,233043,91419,9677,2133,031
Ireland33,596022,34611,47275000799,712930-22232,6452,3098632,397
Italy274,1790159,842115,19244,7395,530025,03920,68719,198-856299,92246,5643,77017,051
Latvia5,53801,9583,5812,68900713774806,9174,6672,895394
Lithuania3,70401,3412,624384001911,354695-26111,82212,4793,435926
Luxembourg92102611,04410700223335379-3846,4966,7581,037147
Malta2,11201,8482640002561702,495547360
Netherlands117,4403,61874,90138,921840012,65518,0048,1770113,27820,88520,6324,414
Poland166,5570136,02130,8982,339003,83116,1818,547-363158,19415,10014,2129,250
Portugal47,469016,74531,14611,84617802,19213,0553,874-42247,7439,5454,7924,480
Romania55,01910,37718,54726,19517,377001,7036,508608-10050,5278,6976,4997
Slovakia27,19414,5906,0106,7024,1700067261,854-10826,10313,88613,0981,879
Slovenia14,8525,4194,1145,4194,712004536248-10013,7278,3878,658854
Spain259,40454,04083,365122,94429,62601925,93860,8336,528-946233,97717,38816,50626,309
Sweden165,26750,9921,534112,76271,086001,50727,30612,863-21130,7568,34133,9108,942


See also

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References

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  1. ^"Statistical Review of World Energy | Energy economics | BP Global".bp.com. BP. Retrieved28 July 2016.
  2. ^abIEA Key energy statistics 2010Archived 2010-10-11 at theWayback Machine Page: Country-specific indicator numbers from page 48
  3. ^"Between the Baltic and the Balkans, the new geopolitics of gas".www.robert-schuman.eu (in French). Retrieved2025-02-24.
  4. ^Wind power for 9 million households in Eastern Europe by 2020
  5. ^Eastern winds, Emerging European wind power markets
  6. ^"Electric Rates Podcast".
  7. ^EU met its 2010 Renewable electricity target – ambitious 2030 target needed EWEA 12 January 2012
  8. ^European Commission (8 March 2022).REPowerEU: Joint European action for more affordable, secure and sustainable energy — COM(2022) 108 final. Strasbourg, France: European Commission. Retrieved2022-07-10. Three annexes also available.
  9. ^European Commission (8 March 2022).REPowerEU Plan — COM(2022) 230 final. Brussels, Belgium: European Commission. Retrieved2022-07-10. Three annexes also available.
  10. ^"Electricity". U.S. Energy Information Administration.
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