Ireland, U.K, Germany set new wind generation records

Published by

Into The Wind

The past few weeks have brought new wind generation records in Ireland, the United Kingdom, and Germany, with the last resulting from winter storm Xaver, which blasted northern Europe late last week.The Irish record came November 8, according to the Irish Wind Energy Association (IWEA), which reported that total wind generation at 8 a.m. reached 1,564 MW, enough to power the equivalent of 1 million Irish homes and over 45 percent of system demand at the time.
IWEA Chief Executive Kenneth Mathews commented, “As families across the country sat down for breakfast this morning, wind energy generation was breaking records …“As global talks continue on combating climate change, we are proud that Ireland is leading the way in demonstrating the potential of wind energy. In addition to the environmental benefits which clean energy offers, we are also seeing exciting new opportunities in terms of jobs and investment with over 3,400 people already employed in this sector.”Britain was next to set a new wind mark, as wind generation rose to 6,053 MW early on the morning of December 2, providing about 14 percent of the electricity on the U.K. system, according to Bloomberg News. The article said nearly 7,900 MW of gas-fired generation was shut down during the period of high winds. It added:”The U.K. plans to almost triple [its] wind capacity by 2020 as it seeks to meet a target to get 15 percent of power demand from renewable energy sources. Wind and solar have no fuel costs, generally making them cheaper than coal or gas.”‘As well as the higher wind power, demand is down by about 2 gigawatts from yesterday as well so it has given the chance for less efficient gas-burn facilities to drop output,’ Gary Hornby, energy markets analyst at Inenco Group Ltd., said by e- mail today.”Finally, Germany’s old wind generation record was literally blown away by Xaver December 6, as wind-generated electricity peaked at slightly more than 26,000 MW, according to Renewable Energy International magazine. The magazine article is worth a look, as it includes a graphic showing wind and solar generation over several days within the broader context of the power system.

Adds the article: “The effect on [electricity] prices was also remarkable. In day-ahead trading, power prices on the exchange in Germany were only half of the levels in France and Switzerland, resulting in a large amount of power exports …

“Perhaps the most interesting thing about the storm in terms of wind power is that it shows how much more wind power capacity we can withstand. The record peak was still not even one third of peak demand at the time, suggesting that Germany might be able to have three times the current level of wind power–100 GW–installed before large amounts of wind power would have to be stored.”

Source: Into The Wind. Reproduce with permission.
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Home battery installations will match the scale of Snowy Hydro scheme – in a single year

Household battery numbers continue to defy all predictions, and they now look set to match…

16 January 2026

“Too valuable to throw out:” Labor announces first national solar panel recycling pilot program

Federal government announces $25 million for a rooftop solar recycling pilot, with up to 100…

16 January 2026

Fortescue begins work on first wind farm, with self-lifting towers and Australia’s biggest turbines

Andrew Forrest's Fortescue starts construction of its first wind farm, featuring unique "self-lifting" tower technology…

16 January 2026

Standalone battery proposed for old gravel pit gets final planning tick despite long distance objectors

A $200 million standalone battery project that attracted no objections from within 50kms of the…

16 January 2026

Australia’s climate hit regions will need fit-for-future science and modelling

It won’t come as much consolation to Victorian communities picking through the burnt rubble from…

16 January 2026

One ship loaded with solar PV is now worth more to the grid than 120 coal-carriers

Technology gains mean that one ship load of solar PV panels is now worth more…

16 January 2026