Renewables

Greece produces record 47.1% of electricity from renewables so far in 2022

Greece record 47 1 electricity renewables 2022

Photo: Green Tank

Published

December 5, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 5, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The share of electricity demand in Greece covered from renewable sources climbed to an unseen 47.1% in the first ten months of the year. Net imports covered 6.6%, the least since 2013. In October alone, demand was 9% lower than in the same month of 2021.

Electricity production from renewables including large hydropower plants amounted to 20.2 GWh in the ten months through October, according to data released by Greece’s Independent Power Transmission Operator – IPTO or Admie. It exceeded the combined share of fossil gas and lignite, at 19.9 GWh, for the first time so far for the period, Green Tank reported.

Fossil fuels were still ahead in the first nine months of the year, but an increase in renewable electricity production, a significant decline in electricity demand,  high gas prices and other economic parameters reversed the trend. Power output from fossil gas and lignite dropped 58% and 23%, from October 2021.

Greece record 47 1 percent electricity renewables 2022

Demand in October was fourth lowest for any month in past decade

Renewables including large hydro met 47.1% of demand in the first ten months or five percentage points more year over year. The share of net imports was 6.6%, the lowest level since 2013. Total demand tumbled 9% in October on an annual basis. At 3.65 GWh, it was the fourth-lowest result for any month in the past ten years.

The share of lignite in power demand climbed only slightly in October on an annual basis

Green energy’s share and total output surged despite a decline in the large hydro segment, caused by drought. Lignite accounted for 10.9% from January through October, just 0.4 points more than in the same period of 2021.

Renewables excluding large hydro are largest electricity source from January 1

Renewables without large hydro achieved the highest percentage increase (18.4%) in production, to 16.7 GWh, beating gas for the first time and becoming the largest source.

Monthly production from renewables was the second-highest so far, trailing the record from July.

On October 7, the demand in Greece’s electric power system was covered 100% from renewable energy sources for at least five hours for the first time.

Greek renewables and especially solar are set for a record year, as 888 MW was added in the first six months and the combined capacity of new installations is expected to rise even further in the second half.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Serbia drafts just transition action plan public debate

Serbia drafts just transition action plan

30 May 2025 - The Ministry of Mining and Energy has published a draft just transition action plan and launched a public debate

Regional Power Sector Exchange Western Balkans disitribution system operator dso grids ohrid giz

Third Regional Power Sector Exchange in Ohrid: Power grids at core of energy transition

30 May 2025 - The third Regional Power Sector Exchange of the Western Balkans gathered over 80 energy professionals from the Western Balkans

two solar power plants egesa enerji vojvodina

Turkish Egesa Enerji to build two solar power plants in Serbia’s Vojvodina province

30 May 2025 - Turkish company Egesa Enerji has launched a project to build two solar power plants in Vojvodina, with a total nominal capacity of 8.6 MW

Green for Growth Fund partnership Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency Sida

Green for Growth Fund launches partnership with Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency

30 May 2025 - GGF and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency are expanding green lending in the Western Balkans and the EU's Eastern Neighborhood