鏈接:《中國風(fēng)電市場投資建設(shè)與運營數(shù)據(jù)統(tǒng)計》
鏈接:《中國風(fēng)電市場投資建設(shè)與發(fā)展前景預(yù)測深度調(diào)研分析報告》
鏈接:《中國分散式風(fēng)電市場投資建設(shè)與發(fā)展前景預(yù)測深度調(diào)研分析報告》
鏈接:《中國海上風(fēng)電市場投資建設(shè)與發(fā)展前景預(yù)測深度調(diào)研分析報告》
鏈接:《中國風(fēng)電設(shè)備升級改造、退役市場投資建設(shè)與發(fā)展前景預(yù)測深度調(diào)研分析報告》
Europe installed 16.4 GW of new wind power capacity in2024. The EU-27 installed 12.9 GW of this.
84% of new wind capacity built in Europe last year wasonshore. And 75% of new wind installations up to 2030 willcontinue to be onshore.
Germany built the most new wind capacity last year, thanksto its ongoing expansion of onshore wind. After Germany,the UK and France built the most new capacity. All threecountries installed new capacity onshore and offshore.
Wind energy made up 19% of all the electricity consumedacross the EU-27 in 2024. It was 56% in Denmark, 33% inIreland, 31% in Sweden and 30% in Germany.
Europe’s Governments awarded 36.8 GW of new wind powercapacity across 12 countries in 2024: 17 GW onshore and19.9 GW offshore. This was a record amount and 1/3 morethan the volume awarded in 2023.
New installations in 2024 were lower than expected. Gridbottlenecks, ongoing issues with permits in many countriesand challenging financial conditions all mean that windenergy is not expanding as quickly as Governments wouldlike.
Restrictions in grid capacity, port capacity and vessel
availability are also hindering the expansion of offshorewind.
We now expect Europe to build on average 31 GW of newwind farms a year over the period 2025-2030.
In the EU we expect to build on average 23 GW of new windfarms a year over the same period, taking total wind energycapacity to 351 GW by 2030: 304 GW onshore; 48 GWoffshore. The EU’s designated target is 425 GW1.
2024 saw more onshore wind farm investments than inprevious years. Total onshore “Final Investment Decisions”(FIDs) came to €24.7bn, and with an extra €7.9bn of offshoreinvestments, this means almost 20 GW of new wind farmswere financed and will now be built over the next few years.Sustained wind deployment in the EU in the 2030s wouldallow wind to almost quadruple its output by 2040 comparedwith today.
But Governments now need to continue expanding andmodernising their electricity grids, investing in portinfrastructure and implementing the EU’s new permittingrules in full.
Energy is at the core of Europe’s competitivenesschallenge. Electrification will help drive the resilience andcompetitiveness of our economy while staying the course ondecarbonisation.
Investing in our electricity grids will help unleash the massivepotential of renewables, meet rising energy demand whiledisplacing expensive fossil fuels, and create a self-sustaininginvestment climate for decarbonised energy.