Europe hits staggering 50% renewable power, Germany leads at 65%

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • Europe hits staggering 50% renewable power, Germany leads at 65%
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Komentáře • 424

  • @philiptaylor7902
    @philiptaylor7902 Před 7 dny +70

    Here in the UK, wind is set to be the largest single source of electricity generation this year, ahead of gas for the first time.

    • @iareid8255
      @iareid8255 Před 7 dny +1

      Phil, nonsense, nowhere near, wind is about 25 to 30% on an average (The last two full years, 2022 and 2024) were just over 7 gigawatts from an installed capacity of 25 gigawatts plus, it's abysmal. That apart while you can run a grid on gas alone, you can't run a grid on wind alone, it just can't work. Gas is essential, wind is not but our technically illiterate politicians are intent on crashing our grid. Don't listen to Sam his knowledge and understanding is poor.

    • @pauld3327
      @pauld3327 Před 7 dny +2

      But gas can produce electricity on demand...

    • @ecospider5
      @ecospider5 Před 7 dny +3

      In Washington State we are getting closer.
      18% gas
      8% wind
      4% coal
      60% hydro
      8% nuclear
      Gas and coal has been shrinking each year. Wind and solar has been growing. So I expect wind will surpass natural gas in 5 years at the most.

    • @philiptaylor7902
      @philiptaylor7902 Před 7 dny +9

      @@pauld3327 well obviously we will be dependent on gas to cover peaks in demand and troughs in renewables for a few years to come, until storage is built up sufficiently. Even so in 10 years time I’m pretty confident that gas will be where coal is now. Gas has plummeted by 30% as a source of electricity generation in the UK over the last 2 years!

    • @Leonardo555ZZZZ
      @Leonardo555ZZZZ Před 7 dny +3

      So now that you have so much free wind power , are your power bills now lower than they were before the wind power took over ?

  • @philipbroggio9315
    @philipbroggio9315 Před 7 dny +116

    In UK our last coal powered plant is due to shut down in September .

    • @Leonardo555ZZZZ
      @Leonardo555ZZZZ Před 7 dny +7

      Watch your electricity bills rise even more.

    • @gerbre1
      @gerbre1 Před 7 dny +16

      @@Leonardo555ZZZZ New interconnector to come between Germany and UK soon which makes direct exchange possible and lowers prices.

    • @Leonardo555ZZZ
      @Leonardo555ZZZ Před 7 dny +6

      @@gerbre1 Interconnector to try and prevent blackouts when the wind stops blowing.
      Lower prices ? Good luck with that.

    • @gerbre1
      @gerbre1 Před 7 dny +9

      @@Leonardo555ZZZ This hour my electricity costs 15,4 ct/kWh in Germany. From 0:00 to 18:00 it's below 17 ct/kWh.

    • @steve_787
      @steve_787 Před 7 dny +16

      @@Leonardo555ZZZZ why? It only contributed 1.8% of all power last year and only 1% so far this year. Maybe look it up before you post stupid comments.

  • @alexterrell1062
    @alexterrell1062 Před 7 dny +21

    Balcony Solar: This is really big in Germany and is spreading across Europe. The EU has passed a law saying that anyone can connect up to 800W of solar (inverter output) into their own grid, via a normal plug socket. So no need to get an electrician involved. The idea behind 800W is that means all the production is used at home, and no new metering is required.
    Because the electricians, roofers, and utility company are left out, costs are low - about €800 for 800W, (including grid tied 800W inverter) and falling.
    (I actually saw 425W PV panels being sold for €89 in the local DIY store! Two of those plus an inverter and mounting kit should be heading for €500)
    If the 800W saves on imports of 800KWh per year, that is a saving of about €260 per year, so payback is only about 3 years. And that is in Germany. Imagine what this will do in Spain and Italy. Imagine what it could do in Australia, the USA.
    And, one other point - this summer in Germany the weather has been lousy. March to June solar is down 20% per unit. If we'd had a normal Q2 for weather, solar production would be much higher.

    • @anguscampbell1533
      @anguscampbell1533 Před 7 dny

      Interesting.
      Could you explain the "via a normal plug socket" a little more please?

    • @johnfrancis4401
      @johnfrancis4401 Před 7 dny +3

      @@alexterrell1062 Your maths seems very conservative. The system should payback in less than 3 years. I have solar panels on my NE England roof and had to go through an inspection system to authorise feed in into the National Grid. I have 10 kWh LFP batteries linked to the solar panels via an inverter and an EV charger for my MG4. I buy electricity during the night when it is cheap (about €0.10 per kWh) to run my appliances during the day. In winter I also use my EV as an extra battery for those appliances. However I have a gas boiler and gas fire which I use for hot water and radiators and my gas bill is quite high for 5 months.
      WELL DONE YOU and well done the EU for this 800W maximum addition to electricity generation. As you say Italy and Spain will be enjoying significant savings.

    • @martinhatzl9519
      @martinhatzl9519 Před 7 dny +2

      Here in Austria i bought 4 Pcs of 420 W Solarpanels and a 1,6 kw Inverter, all together for 600 Eur Just plug it into 230Volt outlet and let it run. for Regulatory purposes we should limit the poweroutput to 800 Watt. thats posible by Softwar in the inverter. In the near future we will combine it with cheap LFp Batteries for the Night. We should do that all over the world and we will have plenty of Energie.

    • @javelinXH992
      @javelinXH992 Před 7 dny

      @@anguscampbell1533 literally what he said, you just plug into a normal house sockets. The power flows into your house from there rather than out from the socket to your devices. They were available for a short period in the UK, but then the regulator said no. Still waiting for this to be sorted out.

    • @martinhatzl9519
      @martinhatzl9519 Před 7 dny

      I forgot to say in 2024 all this is taxfree so its now less than 500 Eur.

  • @thomasbeach7436
    @thomasbeach7436 Před 7 dny +20

    Don't forget data centers. They use a lot of electricity. Everybody is using them whether they know it or not. We are producing a lot more but we are using a lot more too! Thanks for the video!

    • @beyondfossil
      @beyondfossil Před 4 dny +1

      Yes, this is exactly how it should be with energy. More energy expands our civilization's horizons and opportunities. Renewables is the only way forward towards sci-fi levels of advancement leaving the old problems and old ideas behind.

  • @John-FourteenSix
    @John-FourteenSix Před 7 dny +9

    Great report Mister Viking.
    Your figures generally align with the UK National grid live feed data.

  • @Jonse70
    @Jonse70 Před 7 dny +34

    Putin made this happen... unwillingly, of course, but Europe needs to be independent from Russian oil and gas 😉

    • @JamesBond-qv2ht
      @JamesBond-qv2ht Před 7 dny

      Trump was right again.

    • @MechmanGetrieb
      @MechmanGetrieb Před 7 dny +5

      I totally agree. I´d like to add that it´s vital to be as energy independent as possible, not only from Russia.

    • @jaaklucas1329
      @jaaklucas1329 Před 7 dny

      Putin unwittingly yet he still sneaks his oil to China. Fossil fuels are geopolitical, everyone has renewables .

    • @justinr9753
      @justinr9753 Před 7 dny +3

      I clearly remember the disrespectful German delegates who laughed in New York - 2017 when warned not to be too reliant on Moscow or any single nation for energy, they made it clear that it makes their friendship stronger! I haven't been following along, is their friendship not stronger now, what happened?!? 😂

    • @MechmanGetrieb
      @MechmanGetrieb Před 7 dny

      @@justinr9753 Well the fraze was "change by trade". And it did work for a long time.
      I want to say "as long as there was someone responsible on the steering weal" Perestroika was the term. Gorbatschow and Jelzin did a great job in transforming there country to the better.
      Russia became just a normal country for a while. But as soon as Putin came in it startet to degenerate back into something else.
      Long story short, the general idea of "change by trade" can work. But it is obviously never a good idea to increase dependency.

  • @MrJaykay12345
    @MrJaykay12345 Před 7 dny +5

    Change happens slowly and then all of a sudden, can’t wait to breathe that cleaned up that air from all those PM10s , roll on renewables

  • @ALCLCFVIS
    @ALCLCFVIS Před 7 dny +2

    i can't agree with cutting trees and forests to build solar mega parks....when +70% of roofs (housing, commercial, industry) are empty. Welcome from sunny Portugal where protected trees (that actually produce oak for cork) are cut down. And that's the direction it's going over here

  • @anguscampbell1533
    @anguscampbell1533 Před 7 dny +3

    Here in Canada our biggest concern is wintertime heating which dives our utility bills sky high. Heat Pumps seem to be the way to go for that but infiltration in the market is slow. As aging furnaces die we will see more and more heat pumps but also more electricity which hopefully can be met with rooftop solar along with battery storage.

  • @tomkenis861
    @tomkenis861 Před 7 dny +1

    Balcony-solar is not yet legal in Belgium - notwithstanding, I installed a system anyway. Just one panel gives me about 1kwh per day on average, enough to substantially decrease my electricity bills.

  • @Allart79
    @Allart79 Před 6 dny +1

    Don't forget that we still need to electrify industry and transportation, so the electricity demand will go x5. We're not there by a long shot

  • @tobiwan001
    @tobiwan001 Před 4 dny

    But people claimed Germany had chance without nuclear? In fact, Germany needed only 6 months to add enough renewables to compensate for shutting down nuclear. And the price went down.

  • @ambassadorfromreality1125

    Balcony solar is not possible in the uk either. The reason is safety. The Balcony solar has a built in microinverter and a normal power cord with a plug on it. If the microinverter fails (they normally only work when connected to the mains) they could power up the plug pins which are exposed.
    In the uk we have ring mains and there is no limit to the number of sockets on the main so there would be nothing to stop an enthusiast from connecting a load of panels and overpowering the circuit.
    In germany they tend to have a single circuit per socket (or a couple) so the circuit cannot be overloaded .
    Sadly UK domestic is not suitable but germany and other countries are.

  • @justinr9753
    @justinr9753 Před 7 dny

    Good for them, i remember 2017 when their disrespectful delegates laughed when warned not to be too reliant on any single nation for energy. They laughed and said it makes their friendship with Moscow stronger. I didn't get what was so funny until 5 years later when they were putting together emergency energy team and tearing down beautiful 100 year old buildings to get lignite. Luckily for the people, they had a mild winter that year.

  • @thomasgriffiths3815
    @thomasgriffiths3815 Před 6 dny

    No, it is not illegal to put solar panels on your balcony or yard in Aust. Ok if is off grid and is extra low voltage. Can parallel up say new or second hand solar panels if wired correctly ie fused and cable sized correctly. Feed to a DC-DC converter, the output say a LiFePO4 12V battery/s (either 12 or 24 Volt system, depending). From this battery, connect a good quality pure sinewave inverter eg a 3kW one to charge your EV or run an AC at night or whatever. I just saved you some $$ (as long as you do it right and don't burn your house/car down) You are welcome 👍⚡️

  • @simonweakley3479
    @simonweakley3479 Před 7 dny +7

    We have reduced our home energy consumption by a third because the price has doubled, not because of home solar, but we have replaced our gas cooker with electric. We have also reduced driving by 50% and use public transport more which is free for us. The UK still needs Rolls Royce mini reactors which still have not been ordered by the Government.

    • @unclefatbloke
      @unclefatbloke Před 7 dny

      SMRs are not expected to be ready for use until 2032. They also say that preparing the 'ground' for an installation takes 2 years.
      So, real orders before 2030 don't make much sense!
      Additionally. in the next 5 years a LOT can happen with renewables!
      Perovskite PV panels are MUCH more efficient than the existing ones, so that could pusha greater usage of solar - even in the sunny UK!
      More efficient, and recycle friendly, wind turbines are being developed, which again could increase its 5 of the total!
      New investment in old nuclear power plants should be abandoned completely! They cost 20B quid+, and take 10+ years to bring online!
      What amazes me is the lack of government investment in Wave power!
      We have limited sunshine, and days with no wind, but the tide ALWAYS goes in and out!

  • @freeheeler09
    @freeheeler09 Před 7 dny +24

    Thanks for this Sam! Here is my usual comment. Solar power and electric vehicles and heat pumps, induction stoves, etc. are all ready for adoption. We citizens need three to free ourselves of the crooked oil and electricity cartels. 1. Affordable loans for solar, batteries and EVs. 2. Home storage batteries that are actually affordable. For me that means less than $100/kwh. 3. We need affordable EVs! Less than $20,000!

    • @ecospider5
      @ecospider5 Před 7 dny +4

      I believe the affordable EV’s will come from the used market. I just purchased a 2020 Model Y for $27,000. Next year I expect a 20% drop in value for used EV’s. After 2 years we will start seeing used EV’s with 30,000 miles on them for under $20,000

    • @chrishaberbosch1029
      @chrishaberbosch1029 Před 7 dny +3

      I got a 2019 3 for $19,100

    • @rogermartinez78
      @rogermartinez78 Před 7 dny +1

      What ICE cars that are new cost less than 20K, what we need are EVs in the same price range as gas cars.

    • @djt8518
      @djt8518 Před 7 dny

      ​@@rogermartinez78I can't afford either one unless it was free

    • @rogermartinez78
      @rogermartinez78 Před 7 dny +1

      @@djt8518 nothing in life is free my friend, even burning fossil fuels are not cost free. We have to have a plan to purchase the products we need to go green, I did.

  • @tothimre7950
    @tothimre7950 Před 7 dny +1

    5:07 "In Europe you can just put a solar system in your balcony" I wish, but this section is unfortunately NOT FULLY true!!! Also there is a HUGE limitation on the MAX power output. "The operation of solar power stations with a maximum power of up to 600 watts on balconies is allowed in 25 out of 27 EU countries (except Belgium and Hungary)." I live in Hungary so it is ILLEGAL here and power company will remove you from the grid if you install one. Thanks again Viktor... Also with 600W limitation it won't be enough to supply a house and fare from enough to charge an Electric car...

  • @pr7049
    @pr7049 Před 7 dny +2

    These initial steps are the easiest ones, its the last 10% that is the hardest one. Already 80-90% of electricity in Nordics🇫🇮🇸🇪🇩🇰🇧🇻

    • @JacquesMartini
      @JacquesMartini Před 6 dny

      Wrong! 80% of NEW cars at best! How long will it take to make the COMPLETE fleet elektric, including trucks?

  • @pcproffy
    @pcproffy Před 7 dny +21

    Germany had a drop in electricity usage because high prices led to lower use.

    • @robinheider414
      @robinheider414 Před 6 dny

      Not the whole story. Did you just edit the first part of the report out in order to mislead the comment section.
      A sluggish economy saw primary energy consumption in Germany fall to a historic low in 2023, according to preliminary figures from energy data service AG Energiebilanzen (AEGB). Germany consumed 10,791 petajoules (PJ) of energy, a drop of more than one quarter compared to 1990 levels, and down 7.9 percent on last year. Energy-related CO2 emissions fell by 10 percent this year as the country produced more of its power from renewables and overall consumption went down. The fall was largely down to a recession in economic output- and a drop in energy-intensive production in particular - but warm weather and high energy prices also played a role, AEGB found.
      The last German nuclear power plants went offline in April 2023, resulting in a drop of nuclear power consumption of almost 80 percent. Hard coal consumption was down nearly 17 percent, while electricity generation from renewable energies grew by around 5 percent. The fall in energy-related CO2 emissions this year amounted to 66 million tonnes, according to the AEGB figures.

    • @longstops1430
      @longstops1430 Před 6 dny +1

      not talking about electricity use, but the source of generation.

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 5 dny

      ​@@longstops1430even worse, not talking about the source of generation but the source of PUBLIC generation. I have PV on my roof and use a little bit more energy than in the Former years (because I added AC). If you look from the grid I SEEM to consume less. Seems like my neighbors consumer less as well, because I also feed into the grid about the same amount I draw from the grid. Meter reading in Germany are taken once a year, so the values you hear or read about are definitely off, because they do not account for the privately owned generation of power.

    • @Briand-ei1gs
      @Briand-ei1gs Před dnem

      The reason for a drop in fossil fuel use is because of a general decline in energy use be ause wind and solar has destroyed the economies of Europe! It will continue deztroying it until you are using the same amount of energy you used before coal. The last time we lived off wind and solar. Living conditionz of that time will return and you will not only not like it. You probably won't survive it​@longstops1430

  • @yyykkk8498
    @yyykkk8498 Před 7 dny +3

    many nuclear power were stopped for maintenance in the biggest nuclear producer country.

  • @briangriffiths1285
    @briangriffiths1285 Před 7 dny +1

    Just watch the next 12 months with more big builds of wind and solar coming on stream in the UK and across Northern Europe. And on the good windy sunny days we are paid to use it! And yes gas will be filling in the gaps for a few more years but really in small amounts from 2026.

  • @markplain2555
    @markplain2555 Před 3 dny

    Currently... the pilot Nuclear Small Modular Reactor being commissioned in Canada costs CAD$2.5 billion (although the price is expected to drop once commercial reactos are built). This reactor will produce 10MW of energy.
    .
    For comparison, in Canada, a solar farm that produces 10MW costs CAD$16 million.
    .
    Need I say more?

  • @tombh74
    @tombh74 Před 7 dny

    I don't believe the main reason for electric energy demand dropping is due to unaccounted solar. Energy prices went through the roof in 2021, so there was a lot of focus on energy efficiency, reducing unnecessary demand, switching to heat pumps, better insulations etc. Some high-energy-demand businesses also went bust or moved out of Europe.

  • @RawandCookedVegan
    @RawandCookedVegan Před 7 dny

    Thanks Sam. Love the references to German solar. Zeihan's thesis is that German climate makes solar/wind unsuitable. Your videos reveal the opposite.

  • @KohnHarker
    @KohnHarker Před 6 dny

    Vematum's market entry timing couldn't be better.

  • @calebfielding6352
    @calebfielding6352 Před 7 dny +2

    and electric prices are going up and up

    • @Suburp212
      @Suburp212 Před 18 hodinami

      Wrong. Germans paid 0.65 Euro per kWh in 2022 and now it is down to pre war levels again, 0.2-0.25 Euro per kWh

    • @Suburp212
      @Suburp212 Před 18 hodinami

      No, Germans paid 0.65 Euro per kWh in 2022 AMD now it is back down to pre war levels at 0.2-0.25 Eruo per kWh.

  • @martinhughes9115
    @martinhughes9115 Před 6 dny

    Sam, significant amounts of this green energy is by burning wood pellets. This is even more polluting than the coal it replaces and in uk comes out of the same smoke stacks at Drax and Ironbridge as the coal it replaced with government subsidies to make it profitable. Do an article about this, it is so counter intuitive while subsidies for EVs have been withdrawn.

  • @ianordish9745
    @ianordish9745 Před 7 dny +2

    Real world figures for electricity generation
    32% coal
    23% Oil
    26% natural gas
    4% Nuclear
    6% Hydro
    8% Other renewables

  • @ZaneRoughley
    @ZaneRoughley Před 6 dny

    Vematum's focus on user experience sets a new standard.

  • @dzcav3
    @dzcav3 Před 6 dny

    Lower demand for electricity in Europe is largely due to industry moving overseas due to high energy prices.
    One of the biggest issues with solar and wind is that they are intermittent, while demand is continual. That means that backup generation (typically fossil) needs to be kept on inefficient standby. This results in overall increased costs. Batteries are too expensive to solve the cost problem. Poor people suffer as a result.
    “. . . a naïve observer might conclude that the rising share of new renewables (solar and wind) will usher in an era of falling electricity prices. But in reality, the opposite has been true.” Vaclav Smil, Numbers Don’t Lie, p.172

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 5 dny

      Citing a wrong statement does not change the facts. I put a pv on my roof, and my electricity bill dropped by more than 60% (despite installing and using AC now). And my roof/pv is small (6kWp).

  • @elapplzsl
    @elapplzsl Před 6 dny

    Fossil fuel usage for electricity in Germany have barely gone down though. Lignite 18.7% (2019)- 17%(2023) and hard coal is at 9.5%(2019) to 8.6%(2023) and natural gas usage have actually increased slightly.
    What Renewables did was take up the share of nuclear power which is low emissions anyway.

  • @tony0x48
    @tony0x48 Před 7 dny +5

    The decrease in demand in Europe over the last two years is because electricity prices increased vastly in Europe after you know what happened, and people had to cut their usage because they couldn't afford their bills. There may have been an uptick in domestic solar installations as well, but it certainly isn't the whole story.

    • @seppwurzel8212
      @seppwurzel8212 Před 7 dny

      Why then are electricity prices lower than before covid over here in germany??

  • @dennisdonnelly4440
    @dennisdonnelly4440 Před 3 dny

    EV's improve grid efficiency by using otherwise wasted night time power for charging. So even when the mix was mostly fossil fuel based, it still was cleaned the grid by reducing waste.

  • @stefanweilhartner4415

    in austria it was 79% in 2022. most from hydro and wind, growth of solar is fast!!!

  • @Mixos_place
    @Mixos_place Před 7 dny +6

    and have power bills come down? So the guys with no solar does their electricity provider lower their rates? I hear their heavy industry is moving out of Germany because power prices are thru the roof?. Anyway, I am waiting for the promised power price reductions in Australia the Viking said about last year...

  • @frankcoffey
    @frankcoffey Před 7 dny

    It looks power companies are getting gouged on fuel costs just like consumers. I used to work for a railroad and hauling coal was a license to print money and the price never went down, only up.

  • @izerrandom12
    @izerrandom12 Před 7 dny +2

    Probably other European countries like Switzerland and Austria with a lot more hydropower than Germany have even higher renewables in total energy bill.

  • @markotten1755
    @markotten1755 Před 7 dny

    Thanks for your great work Sam, but I do feel it would be great if you're more precise in the wording regarding 'electricity' or 'power'. I don't know how it is in Australia, but here in Europe we spend a whole lot of energy heating, through gas or otherwise. That all obviously all needs to still be transitioned to sustainable as well but is not in the electricity numbers mentioned. And then there's transport, huge amount of energy consumed. So overall electricity 50%, amazing and so positive for the future! But overall power is a whole different challenge (I did some ChatGPT calculations, especially in Germany it's realllllly incredibly challenging) and is also good to mention for perspective I would say. Keep it up Sam, much love

  • @patrickdegenaar9495
    @patrickdegenaar9495 Před 7 dny +1

    I'm not sure subsidises are required for EVs for much longer.. Chinese EVs are already becoming cheaper than their ICE counterparts, and EU EVs will probably be the same in a few years as battery costs steadily decrease.

  • @michaelginever732
    @michaelginever732 Před 7 dny +9

    Germany had the nuclear reactors though. They should not have turned them all off yet. They would have not have had to have any coal if they hadn't been so premature. I don't think we should be making new nuke plants but existing ones can continue to run until all power is covered by renewables.
    Efficiency of course is also a factor. LED lighting is taking over in homes and on the streets.

    • @krossbolt4100
      @krossbolt4100 Před 7 dny +1

      No, German nuclear power contributed just 1.4 percent in 2023.

    • @hiram1923
      @hiram1923 Před 7 dny

      @@krossbolt4100 LOL, yeah, because they shut them down?? Nuclear energy was still 32% in 2006 and 18% in 2011 in Germany. And Germany's plants were still relatively new and top maintained compared to many other countries, never any major problems. Germany's electricity generation would be fully CO2 neutral today if they had kept them running. But the so-called "Greens" wanted them shut down and preferred to have coal plants running instead.

    • @JacquesMartini
      @JacquesMartini Před 6 dny

      @@krossbolt4100 WOW, with just three nuclear power plant in use, what a surprise. The where 16 running in 2011 . . .

    • @Briand-ei1gs
      @Briand-ei1gs Před dnem

      ​@@JacquesMartiniand they were still burning coal and still are burning plenty of coal. Civilization ran off wind and solar for 6000 years. So we already know exactly what life would be like if we go back to wind and solar

  • @IndigenousEarthling101

    Germany will be an interesting test market to see how well EVs compete without subsidies in 2024 and 2025.

  • @LorieH.Patrick
    @LorieH.Patrick Před 6 dny

    The speed of Vematum's transactions is a game-changer.

  • @user-pk9qu8ni2t
    @user-pk9qu8ni2t Před 7 dny +1

    Finland have started a new nuclear power plant during the last 12 months

  • @DigitalPhage
    @DigitalPhage Před 7 dny +1

    As an interesting counterpoint to Germany's energy journey I would recommend ' Sabine Hossenfelder' latest video.

  • @ws6002
    @ws6002 Před 7 dny

    That is great news, but I didnt hear any mention of the duck-bill curve, meaning how power production lines up with power consumption at different times of day.

    • @scifithoughts3611
      @scifithoughts3611 Před 7 dny

      Your right as that needs to be managed. It is solvable with grid scale batteries or consumers with home batteries or EVs with bidirectional energy agreements with the power company. It’s possible to make money with energy arbitrage if you have a home battery and an agreement with the energy company. Tesla Powerwall is a notable example.

  • @exhippie503ommp2
    @exhippie503ommp2 Před 7 dny

    The nighty news in Oregon has been telling us that the whole grid will collapse if we don't start using the uranium that they bought at a discount. 😅

  • @diablosv36
    @diablosv36 Před 7 dny +1

    The battery revolution thats happening has really sealed the deal for renewables domination. I think grid scale projects will be less needed as more solar and batteries are installed on properties, couple that with EVs with bidirectional charging, we will be seeing a very decentralised power generation system.

  • @dougsheldon5560
    @dougsheldon5560 Před 7 dny

    Taking your panels with makes little sense as the cost for more efficient panels comes down. Here in the US they are considered fixtures, attached to the property like kitchen cabinets.

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi Před 7 dny +1

    Good news! 🎉😊

  • @unfixablegop
    @unfixablegop Před 7 dny +6

    We need the progress very badly. A painful study came out recently that 40% to 80% of the warming effect of our CO2 emissions were temporarily offset by the air pollution that came along with our fossil fuel use. In other words, once we clean up our game, we will be hit substantially harder by the previous CO2 emissions because our air will have less sun blocking particles.

    • @handlaidtracksand3dprinted922
      @handlaidtracksand3dprinted922 Před 6 dny +1

      Reducing the sulfur in shipping fuel and exhaust has drastically reduced the amount of clouds formed over the ocean increasing ocean temperatures as well. We need to carbon capture and use it as methane and kerosine when liquid fuel is needed. Replace crude oil and coal, but all that atmospheric carbon can be used as well.

  • @nerdbikes3841
    @nerdbikes3841 Před 7 dny

    Energy independence has a cost. Germany has been moving away from Russian LPG gas energy supplies and this costs money and effort. China also has been moving towards energy independence and not relying on oil or LPG. This is a worldwide trend where countries and states are moving towards energy independence and solar and wind enable this effort.

  • @chillfluencer
    @chillfluencer Před 7 dny

    During the first quarter of 2024, renewables supplied 58.4% of the country's electricity, setting a new record.
    The problem in Germany are Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg which are quite anti-renewables...otherwise the country already would have over 90% renewable energy generation by now...and that's not counting in all the dams in Germany that aren't used for power generation.

    • @lukasweishaupt2708
      @lukasweishaupt2708 Před 7 dny

      That's wrong. Bavaria is actually in the top 5 when it comes to renewables. We have less wind turbines but keep in mind that we have more PV power than any other state.

  • @dennisd9804
    @dennisd9804 Před dnem

    Renewables are taking over very quickly; what the EU has done is pretty incredible.
    Wind, solar, and batteries are the solution.

  • @FiannaPicker
    @FiannaPicker Před 6 dny

    Vematum's unique features have me convinced it's a winner.

  • @mikefiatx19
    @mikefiatx19 Před 7 dny +6

    Because manufacturing has collapsed. No body agreed to the part of net zero where every business in Europe went bankrupt.

    • @user-zo2pc5lu5q
      @user-zo2pc5lu5q Před 7 dny

      No cheap gas so heavy industry upped sticks and left. So that carbon footprint has just been moved and now when those goods are shipped back to Europe that will add to their carbon footprint total how’s that supposed to help the planet.

  • @mkashay
    @mkashay Před 7 dny

    I hope the decline can indeed be attributed to roof top solar, otherwise it is plummeting manufacturing, which would be really bad.

  • @document6
    @document6 Před 6 dny

    Fabulous news! More of this!!! American media DOES NOT report on this stuff btw can you say bought and sold even though American energy is having milestones too

  • @cupotkaable
    @cupotkaable Před 7 dny

    Thanks God, the planet is saved, finally!

  • @udavster
    @udavster Před 7 dny +2

    "There's no new nuclear power plant since the last time"
    Actually there is, in France

    • @patrickd9551
      @patrickd9551 Před 7 dny +1

      And in all actuality, France never stopped their nuclear program either. They put six reactors into operation in the 90s, four new reactors in '00 and currently one in the '20s, with another six planned. The only decade they failed to put new reactors into service was the '10s. As it takes at least 10-15 years to build a new reactor, you cannot put a political agenda on it either, but you can clearly see when it stopped for a while and even Macron being smart enough to re-kindle the nuclear power.
      But if you are looking towards the broader European continent, you will see a rather shocking thing emerging. Belarus, Romania and Slovakia, all new emerging former soviet countries (or countries behind the iron curtain) trying to claw their way out of socialism, have put new reactors online. The only western european exception being Finland.
      Sure it takes time and money to build new reactors, especially since all nuclear experts have been put out of a job thanks to politicians meddling. It takes time to build up expertise once again. But that's not excuse to stop innovating. It's probably the worst excuse of them all.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 7 dny

      @@patrickd9551
      France has just taken nuclear plants out of commission.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 7 dny

      @@patrickd9551
      You do not know the difference between Socialism and Communism. Sad.

    • @patrickd9551
      @patrickd9551 Před 7 dny

      @@johnburns4017 Yes, so? They are shutting down old plants. That's just proper management, is it not?
      Or do you want to refute those newly built nuclear plants?

    • @patrickd9551
      @patrickd9551 Před 7 dny

      @@johnburns4017 Oh boohoo, I made a mistake. But to be fair, current day socialism is just communism under the disguise of democrazy in some countries.
      But shall we not start this discussion? I triggered you enough already 🤣

  • @georgbrindlinger1008
    @georgbrindlinger1008 Před 6 dny

    unfortunately not 50% of power but only 50% of electrical power. big difference

  • @raymondvincent204
    @raymondvincent204 Před 7 dny +1

    Another reason may well be the change over to LED lighting and insulation programmes

    • @lagmonster7789
      @lagmonster7789 Před 7 dny +1

      And more efficient appliances allround, for instance my LED TV only uses about 1/6th the power of my old CRT and my Fridge/freezer stack is about 1/3rd of what we had earlier. Not to mention phone/tablet doing 80% of what my PC used to do at a mere fraction of the power.(~1/20th)

  • @seppwurzel8212
    @seppwurzel8212 Před 7 dny

    Wow, you used energy charts!! Nice!

  • @GeoFry3
    @GeoFry3 Před 7 dny

    Changed happens slowly, then quickly.
    Down here in Florida Duke energy is dealing with solar hollowing out power demand in the middle of the day.

  • @kingsleysmith7893
    @kingsleysmith7893 Před 6 dny +1

    Why is this an achievement? Yes if you spend vast vast amounts of money on renewables you will get this result. The REAL achievement is how much does it produce on the dull windless days? Reliability is the issue not bulk quantity on the easy days.

  • @contraplano3157
    @contraplano3157 Před 6 dny

    Companies have solar panels on theirs roofs, then they do not need to go get energy from the grid... Less consuption?

  • @johnfrancis4401
    @johnfrancis4401 Před 7 dny +1

    Sam are you confusing electricity production with total power production? Homes need heating and cooking and use gas. Transport uses petrol and diesel. In the UK fossil fuels provide 75% of total energy. I don’t think Germany will be that different. In winter people die of hypothermia in significant numbers. When the sun isn’t there and sometimes this is coupled with no wind too countries rely on fossil fuels. I have solar panels and an EV just in case you imagine I’m biased.

    • @stevencutts6314
      @stevencutts6314 Před 7 dny

      ok so if you look at total energy then electricity is only something like one in five units of energised in the modern world

  • @glenboise4191
    @glenboise4191 Před 7 dny

    Remember that fossil fuels depend on a continuing supply chain providing the fuel to where they are burned or exploded. Supply chains which use more fossil fuels and electricity produced by burning more fossils to dig the coal and pump the oil out of the ground; process it (crush the coal to efficient size or refine it into gasoline, diesel, etc.) into something usable; and transport them by truck, train, boat or ship which explode some form of oil or by pipeline powered by more electricity to where the fossil fuel is burned or exploded. Reducing use of fossil fuels reduces the added demands for powering the fossil fuel supply chain. You do not have those supply chains with solar and wind power backed up by batteries.

  • @Petriiik
    @Petriiik Před 7 dny +1

    there is no plummeting of fossil fuel usage in germany, because they replaced nuclear with fossil...but slovakia turned off the last coal plant in march!!! Replaced it with new nuclear!

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 5 dny

      Wrong. Coal is dropping simply because of the cost for producing power that way is to high. A bunch of coal plants are announced to be closed next year.

    • @Petriiik
      @Petriiik Před 5 dny +1

      @@wora1111 natural gas usage is on the rise. Germany just announced they will continue with coal up to 2038. 14 GW of coal after 2030 is necessary to achieve grid stability.
      They are replacing coal with natural gas, but they use the H2 ready sticker to make it more appealing.

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 5 dny

      @Petriiik I tend to disagree. I am a German and watching closely what happens here.
      My town is connected to the gas grid and I start seeing more and more heat pumps in front of the houses. So the use of gas for private heating will be going down. Gas for generation of power in peak times actually makes sense because it is cheaper than coal and can be used for peak power (not possible with nuclear or coal). But gas still is a lot more expensive than solar or wind so the duration of its usage will be reduced as much as possible. With my own small pv on the roof, I am drawing from the grid 4 months of the year, 8 months I am feeding into the grid. Part of that, because I have a house battery that usually covers the night.
      Some German DNP (distribution network provider) and have started to equip every distribution plant with a battery which helps to stabilize the energy flow on high power lines (>100 kV) and reduce peaks. That in turn reduces the need for plants that produce power during peak times (aka gas plants).
      So, it is smart to have gas power plants for possible peak loads, but it even smarter not to need to use them ...

    • @Petriiik
      @Petriiik Před 5 dny +1

      @@wora1111 gas for peak times is used because gas plants are capable of short start times. Some coal plants need up to 10 days for startup. Some coal plants are kept up in heißer reserve, which means they keep burning coal to keep the plant at operational temperature not producing any power, but being able to do so in a short period. These need to be replaced by gas. If the nuclear would not be turned off, then even the 14 GW of coal for grid stability could be turned off. The actual co2 emmisions of the german grid at 420g co2/kwh are one of the worst in eu. With nuclear this could be much better for the climate.
      With the HP you are right I was more talking about the power grid. With low co2 per kwh also the HP heating would be greener.
      You have invested a lot into your power generation, because you are enthusiastic about it. Most people do not have that possibility as they do not own a house. And most DIY YT channels agree that a battery is not economical, it is just a hobby.

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 5 dny

      @@Petriiik ok, seem we think alike a lot.
      Nuclear provided like 5% of the power in the German grid before being shut down if i remember correctly. So the improvement in CO2-Emission would have been in a similar range. Plus I dislike large plants. If something goes wrong it usually gives you great problems as well. But that is just my philosophy.
      Actually I invested in power generation because I felt bad to invest into AC (needed for my home office) and use up more energy. I just wanted to feel better. Saving/earning money was an unexpected bonus one year later.
      I am not a DIY, I am a physicist though. And I know how to handle numbers. In my case, the ROI of the PV was about 10% in the first year AND I learned a lot about the consumption habits of my family (because of all the data (locally) stored by the PV-system). First thing I noticed was that we consumed most of the energy in the morning and evening hours (after sunset), mostly for dishwasher, washing machine and stove. That drained my small battery and I had to draw from the grid every morning, before the PV was filling it up again.Working at home, it was easy to shift the usage of dishwasher and washing machine into the daylight hours (although now I need to turn them on ;-) ). These (summer) days I start the day (around 6) with the battery filled with about 3kWh
      All that relies on a vital point, my ability to know my current consumption. People that know their consumption pattern and understand its influence on their cost usually react in a similar way, at least those that I know.
      And yes, as a home owner I was able to invest in solar, but that (indirectly supports other users as well. We currently have about 8GWh of officially registered, privately owned battery capacity in Germany and companies like enBW have announced they will implement battery storage in every new distribution plant. That will reduce peaks and the amount of gas needed.
      But I guess most of this is known to you as well, I worte it more for readers with less knowledge of this subject :-)
      YT-Reports about PV and battery and stuff are made by people who earn money with the number of clicks. I rather rely on my colleagues in the Stadtwerke and the experiences of people I personally know and trust.

  • @pavelblaha5243
    @pavelblaha5243 Před 7 dny +10

    The decline in electricity consumption is mainly related to the decline in industrial production in Europe in recent years.

    • @emilsohn1671
      @emilsohn1671 Před 6 dny

      I am inclined to agree that this is the most likely cause.

  • @2470qwerty
    @2470qwerty Před 7 dny +6

    Didn't germany tear down a windfarm to mine brown coal?

    • @justinr9753
      @justinr9753 Před 7 dny

      Disrespectful delegates laughed in New York, 2017 when warned (again!) not to be overelient. "It makes our friendship stronger" they said! Give them 2 a shovel and let them get at that lignite

  • @FlameofDemocracy
    @FlameofDemocracy Před 7 dny

    Transform surplus electricity into to complete the circle.

  • @mattchantiny5828
    @mattchantiny5828 Před 7 dny

    Revisit these numbers in December/January/March....and turn down your thermostats

  • @plau2007
    @plau2007 Před 2 dny

    Why in Germany the electricity price is highest in EU?

  • @Velioris
    @Velioris Před 7 dny +6

    I think pprtugal leads... They have hit 100% several days and overall they are now over 70% in 2023...

  • @rand49er
    @rand49er Před 7 dny

    How much of this is "harvesting the low-hanging fruit?" Will further gains be increasingly more difficult to achieve? I'd love to see oil and coal eliminated as sources of energy, but I also don't want the cost to obtain that to be forgotten.

  • @patrickd9551
    @patrickd9551 Před 7 dny

    Germany is also the country with the highest electricity prices and have the biggest issues with overproduction in Europe.
    Oh and they are also the country with the biggest amount of lignite (brown coal) power plants and even have re-opened lignite mines. The worst king of coal of them all. Coal ain't disappearing for a long time, Germany is utilizing it for grid stabilization and is depending on it massively.
    You see, solar producers are also companies that would like to see profits. It's the government that is guaranteeing their profits (otherwise they wouldn't be build). Guess who has to pay for that "free power" from those solar panels. When overproducing, they even have to shut down solar production, but those power companies still receive the electricity price for not produced power. Thanks daddy government.

    • @blazejnycz1
      @blazejnycz1 Před 7 dny

      100% TRUE👍
      Confirming it as the eastern neighbour POLAND👍🇵🇱❤️😎
      We should slow down with the transformation, and stop any support for electric cars, panels etc, and leave it to the market now, as they're not a babies anymore. And we (normal people) are paying for the new and old fortunes of big fat oligharchs, Wall Street etc... through ETS and other TAXES !
      I'm a big fan of off grid living, electric cars etc, but also love my 20 year old Diesel (which runs on vegetable oil) , nobody should be extremist, everybody should have more common sense, and stop beliving in that CO2 BULLSHIT agenda.... (it is to the maniacs, that want to remove 0.4% co2 from the atmosphere...idiots and manipulators).
      BTW... Great comment

    • @appert14
      @appert14 Před 7 dny +1

      The lignite power plants electricity production has dropped to its lowest level since 1965 in 2023 with a share of only 17% in 2023. In 2024 so far it has further dropped to 14-15%. Total coal electricity production was 25% in 2023 down to 20% in 2024 so far. It's use is declining rapidly so I don't actually see where the dependence is. For grid stabilization gas power plants are used and build as they can more easily be turned on and off and are cleaner.
      The german coal mines where subsidized for decades with billions of euros to stay open. Subsidies are part of all energy production not only renewable and not only germany. France is holding its prices artificially low by subsidizing nuclear plants and EDF has 60-70 billion in debt because of the price cap. Not much better options.

  • @willeisinga2089
    @willeisinga2089 Před 7 dny +3

    Hello Sam. Greetings from Groningen Nederland. News from source Solar Magazine Nederland. We have now, 6 juli 2024
    officially 3 Million Houses and Companies registered with Solar. Accumulated Capacity 17.8 GigaWatt Solar. First semester 2024 187.879 Consumers had Solar installed. Hotel Chain van der Valk Nederland installs 1600 Solar Panels in location Houten Nederland. Installation Time 4 weeks. Solar for Heatpump Heating, Inductioncooking for the Chef, Warm Water, and Charge Facility on the parking for EV. Offshore Windpower installed 5 Gigawatt on the North Sea Nederland. 5 more Gigawatt planned completed in 2028. Makes Offshore Windpower installed 10 Gigawatt. Prices down to 22 cent per kWh for the Consumer. 8 cent productioncost, 11 cent Energy Tax, 3 cent VAT. Makes it 22 cent per kWh. That is 14 cent Tax for the Government on 8 cent productioncost for the Company.

  • @ecospider5
    @ecospider5 Před 7 dny

    I’m going to guess that the balcony solar panels are connected by just plugging them into an existing electrical receptacle. When you do that the wires on that circuit can catch fire because they are overloaded and the circuit breaker won’t trip.
    Here is what it looks like
    15 amp circuit breaker
    Wires rated for 15 amps
    12 amp window AC unit
    5 amps of solar power being backed into that circuit.
    Now someone plugs in a 7 amp device. This plus the AC unit is 19 amps. But the circuit breaker doesn’t trip.
    The circuit breaker doesn’t trip because only 14 amps is going through it. The other 5 amps is coming from the solar connection. You now have a 19 amp load on a circuit designed to only have 15 amps on it. Those wires will get hot and burn the wire insulation then the wall.

  • @A_Litre_of_Farva
    @A_Litre_of_Farva Před 7 dny

    Alberta, Canada’s last coal plant just shut down too 🎉

  • @JoeyBlogs007
    @JoeyBlogs007 Před 7 dny

    But likely doesn't include industrial energy demand.

  • @cmac7384
    @cmac7384 Před 7 dny

    Do Sakuu batteries, please. Batteries with no copper!! Less weight and more energy.

  • @mjcamp01
    @mjcamp01 Před 6 dny

    The average CO2/kWh in UK is 123g for electricity production, enough to power 4 miles for an EV, therefore 31g per mile. Show me any ICE car that can deliver close to 31g /mile CO2, you can't, it doesn't exist. End of argument 👌🏻

  • @strotzzz
    @strotzzz Před 7 dny +7

    Energy demand is reduced in germany because its freaking expensive and the german industry is dying. Emmisions should be up thanks too coal power replacing gas/nuclear power.

    • @Schweineferkel
      @Schweineferkel Před 7 dny

      Actually Not true. The prices are down to 0,25€ kWh, including Inflation of 2022 and 2023.

    • @Schweineferkel
      @Schweineferkel Před 7 dny

      We have the lowest emissions since the 50s.

    • @Schweineferkel
      @Schweineferkel Před 7 dny

      So you are either dumb or you telling lies in your post

    • @jantjarks7946
      @jantjarks7946 Před 7 dny

      I received two letters, both about reduced electricity prices.

    • @Petriiik
      @Petriiik Před 7 dny

      @@Schweineferkel still one of the worst emmissions per kwh in the eu.

  • @fredhearty1762
    @fredhearty1762 Před 7 dny

    Rooftop solar with battery is the perfect solution to transmission improvements. Add EVs, and the 'final solution' for fossil fuels is at hand.

  • @martinhughes9115
    @martinhughes9115 Před 7 dny

    sorry Viking, this figure included significant % burning biomass. It’s not really CO2 free is it? There have also been some dodgy tactics used in sourcing some wood pellets….Best to stick with real green tech not greenwashing of burning stuff.

  • @Suburp212
    @Suburp212 Před 7 dny

    Grmans had to pay 0.65 Euros oer kWh lasr year. That is why oower use dropped. Now it is cheap again, like before the war and interest in Solar PV instantly dropped back down again.

  • @chargeriderepeat7024
    @chargeriderepeat7024 Před 7 dny

    For electricity only, still leaving 90% fossil.

  • @PassiveFIRE
    @PassiveFIRE Před 7 dny

    Germany can't afford a subsidy for TVs whilst its economy is tanking...which hits the whole of the eu... that's why there's a real drop in energy consumption.
    For the UK with closure of our last coal power station in Sept, Wind an increasing source of energy, AND the new govt. committed to a new National Energy plan the UK will start to catch up.
    Currently the UK pays between 100-200% more for our energy costs than France and Germany... we need to fix that.

  • @valian22
    @valian22 Před 2 dny

    Toucan Sam at it again😂

  • @Phil-G1075
    @Phil-G1075 Před 6 dny

    Let’s go maxeon !!!

  • @subbbass
    @subbbass Před 7 dny

    Generation is not input into the grid! the numbers for Germany are not 65% RE into the grid, but 65.3% GENERATION of electricity. Germany has imported some electricity. renewable share of public net electricity load in Germany in 2024 (so far) is 60.3%.

  • @ipsylon7297
    @ipsylon7297 Před 7 dny +4

    BS

  • @cookingonthego9422
    @cookingonthego9422 Před 7 dny

    Grid power is insanely expensive in EU. If you can you slap solar wind or wtw you can. Who has money will instal pump solar ecar combo.

  • @remikosian
    @remikosian Před 5 dny

    I thought France was at 70% + since they have some much nuclear power

  • @joseabreu5802
    @joseabreu5802 Před 7 dny

    Nos tempos mais proximos (dezenas de anos) nao deixaremos o uso de petroleo porque com base no petroleo muitos outros produtos tem de ser fabricados para nosso uso como as caixas de plastico antes destas serem reciclaveis....em portugal ja nao temos centrais a carvao

  • @johnsmedley8843
    @johnsmedley8843 Před 2 dny

    It's not rocket science, the conveniently placed fusion reactor we have gives us 1.4 KW per square m. Everyday. As a mechanical engineer I get bored with stuff.

  • @davidbrayshaw3529
    @davidbrayshaw3529 Před 7 dny

    How's that A/C system work on your 85% fossil fuel supplied power in Thailand? Is it as good as the A/C on the kerosene powered plane that you got off, a week or two ago? Don't talk it, mate. Live it! Set the example, show us how it's all done.

  • @stekra3159
    @stekra3159 Před 7 dny

    75 pecent in Austria

  • @chunderground9880
    @chunderground9880 Před 7 dny

    Global warming - Europe is a cold place in winter - less heating means less electricity