Spain runs entirely on green energy for 9 hours for first time, in harbinger of green future
Spain runs entirely on green energy for 9 hours for first time, in harbinger of green future
Juan Cole

Spain runs entirely on green energy for 9 hours for first time, in harbinger of green future

Spain, the worlds 15th largest economy and the fourth-largest in Europe, recently ran for 9 hours entirely on wind, solar and hydro. It is not the first time the renewables supplied all of the countrys domestic electricity needs on the peninsula, but it is the first time they did so for so many hours in a row, on a weekday when demand is heavier than on the weekends, and when three of the countrys nuclear power plants were shut down for various reasons. So reports Ignacio Fariza at El Pais.

Spain, with a nominal GDP of about $1.427 trillion and a population of 47 million, is a major industrialized democracy, so that this achievement is highly significant for what it tells us about the future.

Spains Prime Minister Pedro Snchez of the Socialist Workers Party has been a booster of green energy. The Spanish right wing had actually put punitive taxes on people with solar panels at the behest of Big Carbon, but Snchezs government repealed them. Since the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and the consequent spike in fossil gas prices, Spaniards have been rushing toput solar panelson their roofs, now helped by EU subsidies and by a plummeting in the cost of the systems.

Spain now has one of Europes largest solar plants.

In 2022, thecountry put in4.28 gigawatts of utility-scale solar, 2.64 gigs of distributed PV, and 1.38 gigs of wind power. That is nearly 7 gigawatts of new solar in one year, and the country is not slowing down.

Spains total powercapacityis 118 gigawatts, with wind making up 29 gigawatts or 22% of the whole. Wind is thebiggestinstalled source of electricity now in Spain. Solar only provides about 10% of electricity, but has enormous potential for growth.

In April, though,solar supplied22% of Spains electricity, and solar and wind together made up 46 percent of electricity production. It has been especially hot and sunny in Spain this spring, which has created water shortages and problems for farmers. Hydroelectric generation is way down. But solar is doing great business.

Spain has lots more wind and solarin the pipeline. By 2026 the country expects to have 10-15 more gigawatts of solar, and 5 new gigawatts of wind capacity. Although the country is planning to phase out its nuclear plants, which currently supply over a fifth of its electricity, by 2030, Spanish scientists are confident that wind, solar, hydro and battery can take up that slack and more.

 

Republished from Informed Comment May 21, 2023

Juan Cole

John Ricardo Irfan “Juan” Cole (born October 23, 1952) is an American academic and commentator on the modern Middle East and South Asia.He is Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan. Since 2002, he has written a weblog, Informed Comment (juancole.com).