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Nice wordplay here, this graph isnt about Renewable energy only but also domestic.Renewables' share of Turkey's installed capacity at 45%
The share of renewable energy sources of Turkey's installed electricity capacity reached 45.2% in 2019, compared to 44.7% in 2018, according to the Turkish Energy Market Regulatory Authority's (EMRA) latest report on Friday.
EMRA's Electricity Market Report 2019 showed that Turkey's licensed installed capacity increased 2.1% to 84,957 megawatts last year. Natural gas got the lion’s share at 30.5%, followed by hydroelectricity with 24.3%, lignite with 11.9%, and imported coal with 10.6%.
Licensed electricity production saw a decline of 0.6% to 294,251 gigawatt-hours. Nearly 30.2% of licensed electricity production came from hydraulic plants, while imported coal, natural gas, lignite plants followed with 20.5%, 19.2% and 15.9%, respectively.
Renewable sources' share in licensed electricity production also posted a considerable increase, from 30.7% in 2018 to 42.1% in 2019.
Turkey's unlicensed installed capacity also scaled up by 18.8% to 6,309 megawatts, with 92.3% of this capacity coming from solar power plants. Unlicensed power production rose by 19.7% compared to 2018 and reached 9,829 gigawatt-hours.
- Imports and exports decrease
Meanwhile, Turkey's electricity imports decreased by 10.3% to 2.2 terawatt-hours. Of these imports, 88.7% came from Bulgaria, 11.2% from Georgia and 0.2% from Greece.
Turkey's electricity exports also showed a 9.3% fall to 2.8 terawatt-hours. Turkey exported 95.7% to Greece and 4.3% to Bulgaria and Georgia.
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/energy/general/renewables-share-of-turkeys-installed-capacity-at-45-/29495
As of June 3, 2020 in Turkey's electricity production based on domestic and dividing the percentage of renewable energy
Nice wordplay here, this graph isnt about Renewable energy only but also domestic.
Coal which is second biggest one with 14% is not good at all, its one of the dirtiest enegry sources there is.
Renewables' share of Turkey's installed capacity at 45%
The share of renewable energy sources of Turkey's installed electricity capacity reached 45.2% in 2019, compared to 44.7% in 2018, according to the Turkish Energy Market Regulatory Authority's (EMRA) latest report on Friday.
EMRA's Electricity Market Report 2019 showed that Turkey's licensed installed capacity increased 2.1% to 84,957 megawatts last year. Natural gas got the lion’s share at 30.5%, followed by hydroelectricity with 24.3%, lignite with 11.9%, and imported coal with 10.6%.
Licensed electricity production saw a decline of 0.6% to 294,251 gigawatt-hours. Nearly 30.2% of licensed electricity production came from hydraulic plants, while imported coal, natural gas, lignite plants followed with 20.5%, 19.2% and 15.9%, respectively.
Renewable sources' share in licensed electricity production also posted a considerable increase, from 30.7% in 2018 to 42.1% in 2019.
Turkey's unlicensed installed capacity also scaled up by 18.8% to 6,309 megawatts, with 92.3% of this capacity coming from solar power plants. Unlicensed power production rose by 19.7% compared to 2018 and reached 9,829 gigawatt-hours.
- Imports and exports decrease
Meanwhile, Turkey's electricity imports decreased by 10.3% to 2.2 terawatt-hours. Of these imports, 88.7% came from Bulgaria, 11.2% from Georgia and 0.2% from Greece.
Turkey's electricity exports also showed a 9.3% fall to 2.8 terawatt-hours. Turkey exported 95.7% to Greece and 4.3% to Bulgaria and Georgia.
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/energy/general/renewables-share-of-turkeys-installed-capacity-at-45-/29495
As of June 3, 2020 in Turkey's electricity production based on domestic and dividing the percentage of renewable energy
Am I missing something here? The article says 45% is renewable, while 66% is domestic and renewable combined? The graph is pretty transparent regarding the information it is showing, in my opinion.Nice wordplay here, this graph isnt about Renewable energy only but also domestic.
Coal which is second biggest one with 14% is not good at all, its one of the dirtiest enegry sources there is.
Yeah, kind of but, it's still better than Natural Gas conversion Plants which relies on imported Natural Gas.Nice wordplay here, this graph isnt about Renewable energy only but also domestic.
Coal which is second biggest one with 14% is not good at all, its one of the dirtiest enegry sources there is.
Unfortunetly, Turkey is the country of "rant"...if there is to make great amount of money, it will go to big companies which have political connections with the government.In denmark, the enegy you generate is used to rewind the counter. So if you use 10k kw a year, and you generate 8k then you end up paying only for 2k. But if you produce 13k you pay nothing, and the extra kw produced goes into the pool.
If you ask me the model from Denmark should be implemented to give incentive to ppl to install pv. So ppl can get used to it too. It takes time.
The point is that if politicians make a law making it possible for private investors to contribute and potentially end up with zero sum. The market will automatically grow exponentially.Yeah, kind of but, it's still better than Natural Gas conversion Plants which relies on imported Natural Gas.
%90 of the energy generated by national means is great improvement a decade ago it was below %50.
Unfortunetly, Turkey is the country of "rant"...if there is to make great amount of money, it will go to big companies which have political connections with the government.
Yeah, kind of but, it's still better than Natural Gas conversion Plants which relies on imported Natural Gas.
%90 of the energy generated by national means is great improvement a decade ago it was below %50.
Unfortunetly, Turkey is the country of "rant"...if there is to make great amount of money, it will go to big companies which have political connections with the government.
I hope you follow davutoglu and pay attention to what he says about the tender processes. He's pretty much talking about how corrupt it is and he was the last pm who tried to make it more fair and decent. Which I believe.I worked for many years in the PV solar panel and wind energy industry. and as you said, there is no political environment at all. stop crying now. Everbody earn money when they do their business honestly from every political past unlike before Erdogan's Turkey.