2015 saw a record 2.5% increase in renewables generation in Europe, which now makes up 29% of total European electricity supply,reports UK think tank Sandbag. However, as a result of lower output from hydropower and nuclear power stations, the amount of fossil fuel generation barely changed. CO2-emissions from the power sector fell only 0.5% after a 7.5% fall in 2014, but according to Sandbag this year will see a rapid fall again.
In its Review of the European Power Sector 2015, based on Eurostat data through 2013 complemented by more recent data from sources like ENTSO-E, Sandbag reports that renewables generation (including hydro) jumped to a record 87 TWh in 2015. Over three-quarters of the incresae came from just three countries: Germany, the UK and Italy.
The renewables increase in each of these 3 countries far outstrips any other European country (see figure2), Sandbag notes. Sweden and France are the only countries that even seem to be readable on figure 2, and generation actually seemed to fall in Spain and the Netherlands.
Source: SandbagThe renewables increase corresponds to 2.5% of European electricity demand. This means that 29% of Europe’s electricity demand is generated from renewables, up from 17% in 2008 (see figure 3)[1].
Source: SandbagHowever, the massive increase in renewables generation did not lead to a fall in fossil generation, notes the report. A fall in nuclear and hydro levels, and an increase in total electricity demand, meant that fossil generation was roughly unchanged in 2015 (see figure 4). Lignite and hard coal only very marginally fell in total, and gas generation saw its first increase since 2010.
Source: SandbagThe changes in fossil generation were dominated by the collapse in UK coal generation, which was offset by increases in coal generation in the Netherlands and Spain (see figure 5). German and Italian fossil generation barely moved, despite record renewables growth.
Source: SandbagElectricity demand rose around 1.1% in 2015, rebounding from a fall of 2.3%. Power sector CO2 emissions fell just 0.5% after a drop of 7.5% in 2014.
Source: SandbagThe two long term trends of increasing renewables and falling electricity demand mean that conventional generation is being crushed. However, CO2 emissions are not falling as fast as hoped. This is because the dirtiest generation of all – lignite generation – is the same level in 2015 as it was in 2010. In addition, only 9% of the fall in conventional generation since 2010 can be attributed to hard coal generation (see figure 11).
Instead, most of the fall was from gas generation: in fact gas generation from 2010 to 2015 fell by the same amount as renewables increased. This is because the marginal cost of gas is more expensive than coal, when using a low carbon price.
If the fall in gas generation since 2010 had instead happened on coal generation, EU power sector emissions in 2015 would be 15% below were they actually are now, Sandbag notes.
Source: SandbagFigure 12 shows how this trend has been slowly developing over the last years, and that the large falls expected in hard coal generation lignite are yet to come.
Source: SandbagLooking forward, there a number of reasons to be confident power sector emissions will begin to fall rapidly again in 2016, besides the trends of increased renewables and falling electricity demand:
But the question of how fast emissions will fall even in the next few years is uncertain, Sandbag notes. There are many factors that may lead to an unexpected slowdown in how quickly emissions will fall. And the root of much of this uncertainty comes from government policy.
Editor’s Note
Source: Sandbag. The full report from Sandbag, Review of European Power Sector 2015, is available here.
[1] Note, because hydro is included in the “official” renewables definition in figure 3, but not included in our analysis above, the increase in renewables including hydro in 2015 was only of 1.6% demand, not 2.5%, due to poor 2015 hydro conditions.
Source: Energy Post. Reproduced with permission.
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