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Electricity sector in Germany

Germany's electrical grid is part of the Synchronous grid of Continental Europe. In 2020, due to COVID-19 conditions and strong winds, Germany produced 484 TW⋅h of electricity of which over 50% was from renewable energy sources, 24% from coal, and 12% from natural gas, this amounting to 36% from fossil fuel .[4] This is the first year renewables represented more than 50% of the total electricity production and a major change from 2018, when a full 38% was from coal, only 40% was from renewable energy sources, and 8% was from natural gas.[5]

Electricity sector of Germany
Data
Continuity of supply0.2815 h (16.89 min) interruption per subscriber per year
Installed capacity (2020)211.31 GW[1]
Production (2021)490.6 TW⋅h[2]
Share of fossil energy40.9% (2021)[2]
Share of renewable energy55% (2023)
GHG emissions from electricity generation (2013)363.7 Mt CO2 [631.4 TW⋅h × 576 g/kW⋅h]
Tariffs and financing
Average industrial tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2013)
medium: 20.60[3]
Gross generation of electricity by source in Germany 1990–2022 showing that the growth of renewables already replaces the soon-to-be-phased-out nuclear (purple), and remaining nuclear partially replacing fossils (gas, hardcoal, lignite)

In 2023, 55% of energy produced was from renewable energy source; a 6.6 percentage points increase from 2022.[6] Within the 55%, 31.1% was attributed to wind, 12.1% to solar, 8.4% to biomass and the remaining 3.4% from hydropower and other renewable.[6]

Germany has consistently produced the most carbon dioxide emissions in the European Union since the turn of the century, a large proportion of this coming from coal and lignite burning power stations, 7 of which are included in Europes top 10 most Co2 poluting list of 2021.

In 2022, Germany produced nearly 635 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions. This was more than the combined emissions produced by the next largest emitters in the EU – Italy and Poland. These three countries accounted for roughly 46 percent of total EU carbon dioxide emissions in 2022.

Germany's installed capacity for electric generation increased from 121 gigawatts (GW) in 2000 to 218 GW in 2019, an 80% increase, while electricity generation increased only 5% in the same period.[7]

Even though renewables production increased significantly between 1991 and 2017, fossil power production remained at more or less constant levels. In the same period, nuclear power production decreased due to the phase-out plan, and much of the increase in renewables filled the gap left behind by closing nuclear power plants. However 2019 and 2020 saw significant reductions in electricity generation from fossil fuel, from 252 TW⋅h in 2018 to 181 TW⋅h in 2020. The German government decided to phase-out nuclear power by end of 2022, however this has been delayed until April 2023 due to supply disruption caused by the war in Ukraine,[8] meaning that future growth in renewables will be needed to fill the gap again. Germany also plans to phase out coal by 2038 or earlier.[9]

Electricity prices edit

German electricity prices in 2020 were 31.47 euro cents per kW⋅h for residential customers (an increase of 126% since 2000),[10] and 17.8 euro cents per kW⋅h for non-residential customers (21.8 with taxes).[11][12][13]

 
Components of the German Electricity Price for Households Source

German households and small businesses pay the highest electricity price in Europe for many years in a row now. More than half of the power price consists of components determined by the state (53%). These taxes, levies and surcharges have tripled since 2000 [from 5.19 to 16.49 Euro Cents]. These include levies for financing investment in renewable energy (22.1%) and for other kinds of taxes (e.g. GST 19%). Grid charges account for almost 25%, and only the remaining 22% are used to actually generate the electricity.

International electricity trade edit

Germany exported 70,237 GWh of electricity and imported 51,336 GWh in 2021.[14] Germany is the second largest exporter of electricity after France, representing about 10% of electricity exports worldwide. [15][16] Germany has grid interconnections with neighboring countries representing 10% of domestic capacity.[17]: 5 

Electricity per person and by power source edit

Germany produced power per person in 2008 equal to the EU-15 average (EU-15: 7,409 kWh/person) and 77% of the OECD average (8,991 kW⋅h/person).[18]

On 8 May 2016 renewables supplied 87.6% of Germany's national electricity consumption, albeit under extremely favourable weather conditions.[19]: 11 

Electricity per capita in Germany* (kWh/person)[18][20][21]
Use Production Export Exp. % Fossil Fossil % Nuclear Nuc. % Other RE* Bio+waste Wind Non RE use* RE %
2004 7,445 7,476 32 0.4% 4,603 61.5% 2,025 27.2% 654 194 6,597 11.4%
2005 7,468 7,523 55 0.7% 4,674 62.1% 1,977 26.5% 670 201 6,597 11.7%
2006 7,528 7,727 199 2.6% 4,796 62% 1,706 22.7% 856 369 6,303 16.3%
2008 7,450 7,693 243 3.3% 4,635 60% 1,804 24.2% 873 381 6,196 16.8%
2009 7,051 7,200 149 2.1% 4,314 59.9% 1,644 23.3% 288* 491 461* 5,811 17.6%
2017 6,038 6,678 640 9.5% 3,199 48.6% 873 13.2% 711 574 1,252 3,501 38.2%
* This data for Germany is extracted from the international column of a Swedish report
* Other RE is waterpower, solar and geothermal electricity and wind power until 2008
* Non RE use = use – production of renewable electricity
* RE % = (production of RE / use) * 100%
Note: European Union calculates the share of renewable energies in gross electrical consumption.

Mode of production edit

German electricity by source in 2023
 Brown coalHard coalNatural gasWindSolarBiomassNuclearHydroOilOther
  •   Brown coal: 77.5 TW⋅h (17.7%)
  •   Hard coal: 36.05 TW⋅h (8.3%)
  •   Natural gas: 45.79 TW⋅h (10.5%)
  •   Wind: 139.77 TW⋅h (32.0%)
  •   Solar: 53.48 TW⋅h (12.2%)
  •   Biomass: 42.25 TW⋅h (9.7%)
  •   Nuclear: 6.72 TW⋅h (1.5%)
  •   Hydro: 19.48 TW⋅h (4.5%)
  •   Oil: 3.15 TW⋅h (0.7%)
  •   Other: 12.59 TW⋅h (2.9%)
Net generated electricity in 2023[22]
 
Germany electricity production by source
 
German electricity generation by source, 2000–2017

According to the IEA the gross production of electricity was 631 TW⋅h in 2008 which gave the seventh position among the world top producers in 2010. The top seven countries produced 59% of electricity in 2008. The top producers were the United States (21.5%), China (17.1%), Japan (5.3%), Russia (5.1%), India (4.1%), Canada (3.2%) and Germany (3.1%).[23]

In 2020, Germany generated electricity from the following sources: 27% wind, 24% coal, 12% nuclear, 12% natural gas, 10% solar, 9.3% biomass, 3.7% hydroelectricity.[4]

Coal edit

In 2008, power from coal supplied 291 TW⋅h or 46% of Germany's overall production of 631 TW⋅h, but this dropped to 118 TW⋅h (24%) in 2020.[4] In 2010 Germany was still one of the world's largest consumers of coal at 4th place behind China (2,733 TW⋅h), USA (2,133 TW⋅h) and India (569 TW⋅h).[23] By 2019 it had fallen to 8th, behind smaller countries such as South Korea and South Africa.[24]

Germany has shut all hardcoal mines by the end of 2018, but still has large open pit mines for lignite in the Western and Eastern parts of the country.

In January 2019 the German Commission on Growth, Structural Change and Employment initiates Germany's plans to entirely phase out and shut down the 84 remaining coal-fired plants on its territory by 2038.[9]

Nuclear power edit

Germany has defined a firm active phase-out policy of nuclear power. Eight nuclear power plants were permanently shut down after the Fukushima accident. All nuclear power plants are to be phased out by the end of 2022. According to BMU this is an opportunity for future generations.[25]

Siemens is the only significant nuclear constructor in Germany and the nuclear share was 3% of their business in 2000.[26] In 2006 large international bribes by Siemens in the energy and telecommunication business were revealed. The case was investigated, for example, in Nigeria, the United States, Greece and South Korea.[27]

The installed nuclear power capacity in Germany was 20 GW in 2008 and 21 GW in 2004. The production of nuclear power was 148 TW⋅h in 2008 (sixth top by 5.4% of world total) and 167 TW⋅h in 2004 (fourth top by 6.1% of world total).[23][28]

In 2009, nuclear power production saw a 19% reduction compared to 2004, and its share had declined smoothly over time from 27% to 23%. The share of renewable electricity increased, substituting for nuclear power.[18]

Renewable electricity edit

 
Germany renewable electricity production by source
 
German renewable energy production by source, 2000–2017
 
Wind turbines in Baltic Sea in 2013

Germany has been called "the world's first major renewable energy economy".[29][30] Renewable energy in Germany is mainly based on wind, solar and biomass. Germany had the world's largest photovoltaic installed capacity until 2014, and as of 2016, it is third with 40 GW. It is also the world's third country by installed wind power capacity, at 50 GW, and second for offshore wind, with over 4 GW.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, along with a vast majority of her compatriots, believes, "As the first big industrialized nation, we can achieve such a transformation toward efficient and renewable energies, with all the opportunities that brings for exports, developing new technologies and jobs".[31] The share of renewable electricity rose from just 3.4% of gross electricity consumption in 1990 to exceed 10% by 2005, 20% by 2011 and 30% by 2015, reaching 36.2% of consumption by year end 2017.[32] As with most countries, the transition to renewable energy in the transport and heating and cooling sectors has been considerably slower.

More than 23,000 wind turbines and 1.4 million solar PV systems are distributed all over the country.[33][34][when?] According to official figures, around 370,000 people were employed in the renewable energy sector in 2010, particularly in small and medium-sized companies.[35] This is an increase of around 8% compared to 2009 (around 339,500 jobs), and well over twice the number of jobs in 2004 (160,500). About two-thirds of these jobs are attributed to the Renewable Energy Sources Act.[36][37]

Germany's federal government is working to increase renewable energy commercialization,[38] with a particular focus on offshore wind farms.[39] A major challenge is the development of sufficient network capacities for transmitting the power generated in the North Sea to the large industrial consumers in southern parts of the country.[40] Germany's energy transition, the Energiewende, designates a significant change in energy policy from 2011. The term encompasses a reorientation of policy from demand to supply and a shift from centralized to distributed generation (for example, producing heat and power in very small cogeneration units), which should replace overproduction and avoidable energy consumption with energy-saving measures and increased efficiency. At the end of 2020, Germany had 2.3 GW⋅h of home battery storage, often in conjunction with solar panels.[41]

Transmission network edit

 
Electrical power transmission grid in 2022 with 380 kV (red) 220 kV (green) and 110 kV (blue) AC power lines

Grid owners included, in 2008, RWE, EnBW, Vattenfall and E.ON. According to the European Commission the electricity producers should not own the electricity grid to ensure open competition. The European Commission accused E.ON of the misuse of markets in February 2008. Consequently, E.ON sold its share of the network.[42] As of July 2016 the four German TSOs are:

In Germany, there also exists a single-phase AC grid operated at 16.7 Hz to supply power to rail transport, see list of installations for 15 kV AC railway electrification in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Special features of German transmission network edit

There are some special features in the transmission network of Germany. Also they have no direct influence on operation, they are remarkable under technical viewpoints.

Garland-type communication cables edit

Many powerlines in Baden-Württemberg, which were built by Energie-Versorgung-Schwaben (EVS, now part of EnBW) are equipped with a communication cable, which hangs like a garland on the ground conductor. Some of these lines have also a second communication cable hanging on an auxiliary wire, which is usually fixed on the pinnacle of the pylon below the ground conductor. Such devices are usually installed on lines with voltages of 110 kV and more, but there existed also a 20 kV-line near Eberdingen, which had a communication cable fixed like a garland on a conductor rope. Although communication cables fixed like a garland where replaced in the last decades by free-hanging communication cables many of these devices are still in use. If a downlink of the communication cable from the suspension level to the ground is necessary, which is for example the case at amplifier stations, lines built by former Energie-Versorgung-Schwaben (EVS) use therefore a cable in the centre of the tower strung by a pond instead of a cable fixed at the tower structure. This construction type can be found as well on lines using garland-type communication cables as on lines using freely span communication cables.

Powerline crossings of Elbe river near Stade edit

 
Elbe Crossing 1 (center) and 2 (right, one mast only)

There are two powerline crossings of the Elbe river near Stade, whose pylons are among the tallest structures in Europe.

Elbe Crossing 1 is a group of masts providing an overhead crossing of a 220 kV three-phase alternating current electric powerline across the River Elbe.[43] Constructed between 1959 and 1962 as part of the line from Stade to Hamburg north, it consists of four masts. Each of the two portal masts is a guyed mast 50 metres (160 ft) in height with a crossbeam at a height of 33 metres (108 ft). One of these masts stands on the Schleswig-Holstein bank of the Elbe and the other on the Lower Saxony bank. Two identical carrying masts 189 metres (620 ft) in height, each weighing 330 tonnes (320 long tons; 360 short tons), ensure the necessary passage height of 75 metres (246 ft) over the Elbe. One stands on the island of Lühesand, the other in the Buhnenfeld on the Schleswig-Holstein side.

Because of the swampy terrain, each mast's foundation is built on pilings driven into the ground. The Lühesand portal mast rests on 41 pilings and the one on the Buhnenfeld on 57. In contrast to the usual construction of such lattice-steel transmission towers, the direction of the line passes diagonally over the square ground cross section of the pylon, resulting in savings in material. The two crossbeams for the admission of the six conductor cables are at a height of 166 metres (545 ft) and 179 metres (587 ft). The mast on the Buhnenfeld bears at a height of 30 metres (98 ft) a radar facility belonging to the Water and Navigation Office of the Port of Hamburg. Each portal mast has stairs and gangways for maintenance of flight safety beacons, and has a hoist for heavy loads.

Elbe Crossing 2 is a group of transmission towers providing overhead lines for four 380 kV three-phase alternating current (AC) circuits across the German river Elbe.[44][45] It was constructed between 1976 and 1978 to supplement Elbe Crossing 1, and consists of four towers:

  • A 76-metre-tall anchor pylon located in Lower Saxony, on the Elbe's southern banks.
  • Two carrying pylons, each 227 metres (745 ft) tall. One is located on the island of Lühesand and the other is near Hetlingen in Schleswig-Holstein, on the northern shore.
These pylons are the tallest pylons in Europe and the sixth tallest of the world. They stand on 95 piers because of the unfavorable building ground. The base of each pylon measures 45 by 45 metres (148 ft × 148 ft) and each pylon weighs 980 tonnes (960 long tons; 1,080 short tons). Crossbeams, which hold up the power cables, are located at heights of 172 (564), 190 (620) and 208 metres (682 ft). The crossbeams span 56 metres or 184 feet (lowest crossbeam), 72 metres or 236 feet (middle crossbeam) and 57 metres or 187 feet (highest crossbeam). Each pylon has a self-propelled climbing elevator for maintenance of the aircraft warning lights; each elevator runs inside a steel tube in the centre of the mast, around which there is a spiral staircase.
  • A 62-metre-tall (203 ft) anchor pylon on the Schleswig-Holstein side.

The enormous height of the two carrying pylons ensures that the passage height requirement of 75 metres (246 ft) over the Elbe demanded by German authorities is met. The height requirement ensures that large ships are able to enter Hamburg's deep-water port.

Electricity pylons edit

 
Donaumast pylon

Unlike in most other countries, there are only few three-level or delta pylons. Instead, two-level lattice pylons called de:Donaumast are widely used. These carry two cables on the upper and four cables on the lower crossarm. Particularly in eastern Germany one-level pylons were used too. Power lines with less than 100 kV mostly run underground today. Unlike in the USA and many other countries, roadside medium-voltage overhead lines do not exist.[46]

Other features edit

 
Booms on cooling tower of Scholven Power Station carrying a 220 kV-circuit leaving the power station

A 302 metres tall cooling tower of Scholven Power Station at Gelsenkirchen, which is used by four units of these thermal power station is equipped with three booms carrying the conductors of a 220 kV-circuit leaving one of these units.

 
Pylon with observation platform near Hürth (2005)

From 1977 to 2010 a 74.84 metres high strainer of powerline Oberzier-Niedersechtem was equipped with a public observation deck in a height of 27 metres, which was accessible by a staircase. After too much vandalism occurred, which endangered also the integrity of the pylon, this observation deck was removed.

 
Radio relay tower on Goose Neck

As in many other countries, power companies in Germany use radio relay links for data transmissions. In most cases the antennas used therefore are installed on lattice towers, but at some sites concrete towers are used for this purpose. The 87 metres tall radio relay tower on Goose Neck mountain (German: Gänsehals) near Bell is the only of these towers equipped with a public observation deck. It is situated in a height of 24 metres and accessible by a staircase.

Summary table edit

2021 Electricity in Germany - Generation and consumption[14]
Source Generation (GWh) Capacity (MW)
Total 557,144 100.0% 250,385 100.0%
Fossil fuels 260,790 46.8% 98,311 39.3%
Renewables 233,000 41.8% 137,762 55.0%
Wind 113,624 20.4% 63,865 25.5%
Solar 49,992 9.0% 58,728 23.5%
Biomass and waste 49,883 9.0% 10,439 4.2%
Hydroelectricity 19,252 3.5% 6,199 2.5%
Geothermal 249 0.04% 46 0.02%
Nuclear 65,441 11.7% 8,113 3.2%
Hydroelectric pumped storage -2,087 -0.4% 6,199 2.5%
Consumption* 511,660 91.8%
Exports 70,237 12.6%
Imports 51,336 9.2%
Distribution losses 26,582 4.8%

*Consumption = Generation - Exports + Imports - Distribution losses

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Energy-Charts". www.energy-charts.info.
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  6. ^ a b "Renewable energy's share on German power grids reaches 55% in 2023". Reuters. 3 January 2023.
  7. ^ "Germany's Energiewende, 20 Years Later". In 2000, Germany had an installed capacity of 121 gigawatts and it generated 577 terawatt-hours, which is 54 percent as much as it theoretically could have done (that is, 54 percent was its capacity factor). In 2019, the country produced just 5 percent more (607 TW⋅h), but its installed capacity was 80 percent higher (218.1 GW) because it now had two generating systems.
  8. ^ "Germany: Nuclear phase-out postponed for three and a half months".
  9. ^ a b Kirschbaum, Erik (26 January 2019). "Germany to close all 84 of its coal-fired power plants, will rely primarily on renewable energy". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 27 January 2019. Germany, one of the world's biggest consumers of coal, will shut down all 84 of its coal-fired power plants over the next 19 years to meet its international commitments in the fight against climate change, a government commission said Saturday.
  10. ^ "Electricity Price Germany: What households pay for power". Strom-Report. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  11. ^ "Electricity price statistics, first half 2020 – Statistics Explained". ec.europa.eu.
  12. ^ "EU price diagram, first half 2020".
  13. ^ "Excluding VAT and other recoverable taxes and levies, first half 2020". ec.europa.eu.
  14. ^ a b "Electricity". U.S. Energy Information Administration.
  15. ^ "Countries by Electricity Exports". AtlasBig. 1 January 1970. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  16. ^ "Germany Energy Market Report | Energy Market Research in Germany". www.enerdata.net. 1 December 2023. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  17. ^ "ENERGY UNION PACKAGE". eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  18. ^ a b c German numbers extracted from Energy in Sweden, Facts and figures, The Swedish Energy Agency, (in Swedish: Energiläget i siffror), Table: Specific electricity production per inhabitant with breakdown by power source (kW⋅h/person), Source: IEA/OECD 2006 T23 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2007 T25 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2008 T26 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2009 T25 20 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine and 2010 T49 16 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  19. ^ WWF (September 2016). 15 signals: evidence the energy transition is underway (PDF). Paris, France: WWF France. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  20. ^ "Energimyndigheten" (PDF). www.energimyndigheten.se. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  21. ^ "Power generation in Germany – assessment of 2017" (PDF). www.ise.fraunhofer.de. Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  22. ^ Burger, Bruno (3 January 2024). Öffentliche Nettostromerzeugung in Deutschland im Jahr 2023 [Public Net Electricity Generation in Germany in 2023] (PDF) (in German). Freiburg, Germany: Fraunhofer-Institut für Solare Energiesysteme ISE. Retrieved 12 January 2024.
  23. ^ a b c "IEA Key Stats" (PDF). iea.org.
  24. ^ "Coal consumption by country 2020". Statista.
  25. ^ "Erneuerbare Energien". www.energiewechsel.de (in German). Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  26. ^ "Climate Change and Nuclear Power" (PDF). assets.panda.org.
  27. ^ [Siemensin lahjusskandaali paisuu edelleen] yle 23.11.2006
  28. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 October 2009. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
  29. ^ . Renewable Energy World. Archived from the original on 12 March 2023. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  30. ^ "Electricity Production From Solar and Wind in Germany 2014" (PDF). ise.fraunhofer.de.
  31. ^ Alexander Ochs (16 March 2012). "The End of the Atomic Dream: One Year After Fukushima, the Shortfalls of Nuclear Energy Are Clearer Than Ever". Worldwatch.
  32. ^ "Zeitreihen zur Entwicklung der erneuerbaren Energien in Deutschland" [Historic data about the development of renewable energies in Germany]. Erneuerbare Energien (in German). February 2018. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  33. ^ http://www.wind-energie.de, Number of Wind Turbines in Germany 29 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, 2012
  34. ^ "Recent Facts About Photovoltaics in Germany" (PDF). ise.fraunhofer.de.
  35. ^ Gerhardt, Christina (9 June 2016). "Germany's Renewable Energy Shift: Addressing Climate Change". Capitalism, Nature, Socialism. 28 (2): 103–119. doi:10.1080/10455752.2016.1229803. S2CID 157399085.
  36. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 March 2012.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  38. ^ . Federal Ministry for Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety. 26 January 2011. Archived from the original on 9 May 2011. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  39. ^ Schultz, Stefan (23 March 2011). "Will Nuke Phase-Out Make Offshore Farms Attractive?". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  40. ^ The Wall Street Journal Online, 24 April 2012
  41. ^ Vorrath, Sophie (24 March 2021). "Germany installed 100,000 home batteries in "year of Corona"". One Step Off The Grid. from the original on 25 March 2021.
  42. ^ Lehmänkaupat hämmentävät EU:n energianeuvotteluja, Helsingin Sanomat 1.3.2008 B11
  43. ^ "Die 380/220-kV-Elbekreuzung im 220-kV-Netz der Nordwestdeutschen Kraftwerke AG" by Hans Heino Moeller of the NWK, Hamburg
  44. ^ "Die Maste der neuen 380-kV-Hochspannungsfreileitung über die Elbe" NWK special edition of "Der Stahlbau", 48th year, issues 11 and 12, pp. 321 to 326, pp. 360 to 366, authors: Friedrich Kießling, Hans Dieter Sperl and Friedrich Wagemann
  45. ^ "Die neue 380-kV-Elbekreuzung der Nordwestdeutsche Kraftwerke AG" NWK special edition of "Elektrizitätswirtschaft", 77th year, issue 10 (May 8, 1978) pp. 341 to 352
  46. ^ The electricity pylon designs of the world - an overview - HoogspanningsNet Forum

External links edit

  • Evans, Simon; Pearce, Rosamund (20 September 2016). "Mapped: how Germany generates its electricity". Carbon Brief. London, United Kingdom. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  • Household electricity prices, 2006–2017 (CC image)

electricity, sector, germany, germany, electrical, grid, part, synchronous, grid, continental, europe, 2020, covid, conditions, strong, winds, germany, produced, electricity, which, over, from, renewable, energy, sources, from, coal, from, natural, this, amoun. Germany s electrical grid is part of the Synchronous grid of Continental Europe In 2020 due to COVID 19 conditions and strong winds Germany produced 484 TW h of electricity of which over 50 was from renewable energy sources 24 from coal and 12 from natural gas this amounting to 36 from fossil fuel 4 This is the first year renewables represented more than 50 of the total electricity production and a major change from 2018 when a full 38 was from coal only 40 was from renewable energy sources and 8 was from natural gas 5 Electricity sector of GermanyDataContinuity of supply0 2815 h 16 89 min interruption per subscriber per yearInstalled capacity 2020 211 31 GW 1 Production 2021 490 6 TW h 2 Share of fossil energy40 9 2021 2 Share of renewable energy55 2023 GHG emissions from electricity generation 2013 363 7 Mt CO2 631 4 TW h 576 g kW h Tariffs and financingAverage industrial tariff US kW h 2013 medium 20 60 3 Gross generation of electricity by source in Germany 1990 2022 showing that the growth of renewables already replaces the soon to be phased out nuclear purple and remaining nuclear partially replacing fossils gas hardcoal lignite In 2023 55 of energy produced was from renewable energy source a 6 6 percentage points increase from 2022 6 Within the 55 31 1 was attributed to wind 12 1 to solar 8 4 to biomass and the remaining 3 4 from hydropower and other renewable 6 Germany has consistently produced the most carbon dioxide emissions in the European Union since the turn of the century a large proportion of this coming from coal and lignite burning power stations 7 of which are included in Europes top 10 most Co2 poluting list of 2021 In 2022 Germany produced nearly 635 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions This was more than the combined emissions produced by the next largest emitters in the EU Italy and Poland These three countries accounted for roughly 46 percent of total EU carbon dioxide emissions in 2022 Germany s installed capacity for electric generation increased from 121 gigawatts GW in 2000 to 218 GW in 2019 an 80 increase while electricity generation increased only 5 in the same period 7 Even though renewables production increased significantly between 1991 and 2017 fossil power production remained at more or less constant levels In the same period nuclear power production decreased due to the phase out plan and much of the increase in renewables filled the gap left behind by closing nuclear power plants However 2019 and 2020 saw significant reductions in electricity generation from fossil fuel from 252 TW h in 2018 to 181 TW h in 2020 The German government decided to phase out nuclear power by end of 2022 however this has been delayed until April 2023 due to supply disruption caused by the war in Ukraine 8 meaning that future growth in renewables will be needed to fill the gap again Germany also plans to phase out coal by 2038 or earlier 9 Contents 1 Electricity prices 2 International electricity trade 3 Electricity per person and by power source 4 Mode of production 4 1 Coal 4 2 Nuclear power 4 3 Renewable electricity 5 Transmission network 5 1 Special features of German transmission network 5 1 1 Garland type communication cables 5 1 2 Powerline crossings of Elbe river near Stade 5 1 3 Electricity pylons 5 1 4 Other features 6 Summary table 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksElectricity prices editGerman electricity prices in 2020 were 31 47 euro cents per kW h for residential customers an increase of 126 since 2000 10 and 17 8 euro cents per kW h for non residential customers 21 8 with taxes 11 12 13 nbsp Components of the German Electricity Price for Households Source German households and small businesses pay the highest electricity price in Europe for many years in a row now More than half of the power price consists of components determined by the state 53 These taxes levies and surcharges have tripled since 2000 from 5 19 to 16 49 Euro Cents These include levies for financing investment in renewable energy 22 1 and for other kinds of taxes e g GST 19 Grid charges account for almost 25 and only the remaining 22 are used to actually generate the electricity International electricity trade editGermany exported 70 237 GWh of electricity and imported 51 336 GWh in 2021 14 Germany is the second largest exporter of electricity after France representing about 10 of electricity exports worldwide 15 16 Germany has grid interconnections with neighboring countries representing 10 of domestic capacity 17 5 Electricity per person and by power source editGermany produced power per person in 2008 equal to the EU 15 average EU 15 7 409 kWh person and 77 of the OECD average 8 991 kW h person 18 On 8 May 2016 renewables supplied 87 6 of Germany s national electricity consumption albeit under extremely favourable weather conditions 19 11 Electricity per capita in Germany kWh person 18 20 21 Use Production Export Exp Fossil Fossil Nuclear Nuc Other RE Bio waste Wind Non RE use RE 2004 7 445 7 476 32 0 4 4 603 61 5 2 025 27 2 654 194 6 597 11 4 2005 7 468 7 523 55 0 7 4 674 62 1 1 977 26 5 670 201 6 597 11 7 2006 7 528 7 727 199 2 6 4 796 62 1 706 22 7 856 369 6 303 16 3 2008 7 450 7 693 243 3 3 4 635 60 1 804 24 2 873 381 6 196 16 8 2009 7 051 7 200 149 2 1 4 314 59 9 1 644 23 3 288 491 461 5 811 17 6 2017 6 038 6 678 640 9 5 3 199 48 6 873 13 2 711 574 1 252 3 501 38 2 This data for Germany is extracted from the international column of a Swedish report Other RE is waterpower solar and geothermal electricity and wind power until 2008 Non RE use use production of renewable electricity RE production of RE use 100 Note European Union calculates the share of renewable energies in gross electrical consumption Mode of production editGerman electricity by source in 2023 nbsp Brown coal 77 5 TW h 17 7 Hard coal 36 05 TW h 8 3 Natural gas 45 79 TW h 10 5 Wind 139 77 TW h 32 0 Solar 53 48 TW h 12 2 Biomass 42 25 TW h 9 7 Nuclear 6 72 TW h 1 5 Hydro 19 48 TW h 4 5 Oil 3 15 TW h 0 7 Other 12 59 TW h 2 9 Net generated electricity in 2023 22 nbsp Germany electricity production by source nbsp German electricity generation by source 2000 2017 According to the IEA the gross production of electricity was 631 TW h in 2008 which gave the seventh position among the world top producers in 2010 The top seven countries produced 59 of electricity in 2008 The top producers were the United States 21 5 China 17 1 Japan 5 3 Russia 5 1 India 4 1 Canada 3 2 and Germany 3 1 23 In 2020 Germany generated electricity from the following sources 27 wind 24 coal 12 nuclear 12 natural gas 10 solar 9 3 biomass 3 7 hydroelectricity 4 Coal edit See also Fossil fuel phase out and List of power stations in Germany In 2008 power from coal supplied 291 TW h or 46 of Germany s overall production of 631 TW h but this dropped to 118 TW h 24 in 2020 4 In 2010 Germany was still one of the world s largest consumers of coal at 4th place behind China 2 733 TW h USA 2 133 TW h and India 569 TW h 23 By 2019 it had fallen to 8th behind smaller countries such as South Korea and South Africa 24 Germany has shut all hardcoal mines by the end of 2018 but still has large open pit mines for lignite in the Western and Eastern parts of the country In January 2019 the German Commission on Growth Structural Change and Employment initiates Germany s plans to entirely phase out and shut down the 84 remaining coal fired plants on its territory by 2038 9 nbsp Gas power station Nossener Brucke in Dresden nbsp Coal fired power plant Scholven Nuclear power edit Main article Nuclear power in Germany Germany has defined a firm active phase out policy of nuclear power Eight nuclear power plants were permanently shut down after the Fukushima accident All nuclear power plants are to be phased out by the end of 2022 According to BMU this is an opportunity for future generations 25 Siemens is the only significant nuclear constructor in Germany and the nuclear share was 3 of their business in 2000 26 In 2006 large international bribes by Siemens in the energy and telecommunication business were revealed The case was investigated for example in Nigeria the United States Greece and South Korea 27 The installed nuclear power capacity in Germany was 20 GW in 2008 and 21 GW in 2004 The production of nuclear power was 148 TW h in 2008 sixth top by 5 4 of world total and 167 TW h in 2004 fourth top by 6 1 of world total 23 28 In 2009 nuclear power production saw a 19 reduction compared to 2004 and its share had declined smoothly over time from 27 to 23 The share of renewable electricity increased substituting for nuclear power 18 Renewable electricity edit Main article Renewable energy in Germany nbsp Germany renewable electricity production by source nbsp German renewable energy production by source 2000 2017 nbsp Wind turbines in Baltic Sea in 2013 Germany has been called the world s first major renewable energy economy 29 30 Renewable energy in Germany is mainly based on wind solar and biomass Germany had the world s largest photovoltaic installed capacity until 2014 and as of 2016 it is third with 40 GW It is also the world s third country by installed wind power capacity at 50 GW and second for offshore wind with over 4 GW Chancellor Angela Merkel along with a vast majority of her compatriots believes As the first big industrialized nation we can achieve such a transformation toward efficient and renewable energies with all the opportunities that brings for exports developing new technologies and jobs 31 The share of renewable electricity rose from just 3 4 of gross electricity consumption in 1990 to exceed 10 by 2005 20 by 2011 and 30 by 2015 reaching 36 2 of consumption by year end 2017 32 As with most countries the transition to renewable energy in the transport and heating and cooling sectors has been considerably slower More than 23 000 wind turbines and 1 4 million solar PV systems are distributed all over the country 33 34 when According to official figures around 370 000 people were employed in the renewable energy sector in 2010 particularly in small and medium sized companies 35 This is an increase of around 8 compared to 2009 around 339 500 jobs and well over twice the number of jobs in 2004 160 500 About two thirds of these jobs are attributed to the Renewable Energy Sources Act 36 37 Germany s federal government is working to increase renewable energy commercialization 38 with a particular focus on offshore wind farms 39 A major challenge is the development of sufficient network capacities for transmitting the power generated in the North Sea to the large industrial consumers in southern parts of the country 40 Germany s energy transition the Energiewende designates a significant change in energy policy from 2011 The term encompasses a reorientation of policy from demand to supply and a shift from centralized to distributed generation for example producing heat and power in very small cogeneration units which should replace overproduction and avoidable energy consumption with energy saving measures and increased efficiency At the end of 2020 Germany had 2 3 GW h of home battery storage often in conjunction with solar panels 41 Transmission network edit nbsp Electrical power transmission grid in 2022 with 380 kV red 220 kV green and 110 kV blue AC power lines Grid owners included in 2008 RWE EnBW Vattenfall and E ON According to the European Commission the electricity producers should not own the electricity grid to ensure open competition The European Commission accused E ON of the misuse of markets in February 2008 Consequently E ON sold its share of the network 42 As of July 2016 the four German TSOs are 50Hertz Transmission GmbH owned by Elia formerly owned by Vattenfall Amprion GmbH RWE Tennet TSO GmbH owned by TenneT formerly owned by E ON TransnetBW renamed from EnBW Transportnetze AG and a 100 subsidiary of EnBW In Germany there also exists a single phase AC grid operated at 16 7 Hz to supply power to rail transport see list of installations for 15 kV AC railway electrification in Germany Austria and Switzerland Special features of German transmission network edit This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message There are some special features in the transmission network of Germany Also they have no direct influence on operation they are remarkable under technical viewpoints Garland type communication cables edit Many powerlines in Baden Wurttemberg which were built by Energie Versorgung Schwaben EVS now part of EnBW are equipped with a communication cable which hangs like a garland on the ground conductor Some of these lines have also a second communication cable hanging on an auxiliary wire which is usually fixed on the pinnacle of the pylon below the ground conductor Such devices are usually installed on lines with voltages of 110 kV and more but there existed also a 20 kV line near Eberdingen which had a communication cable fixed like a garland on a conductor rope Although communication cables fixed like a garland where replaced in the last decades by free hanging communication cables many of these devices are still in use If a downlink of the communication cable from the suspension level to the ground is necessary which is for example the case at amplifier stations lines built by former Energie Versorgung Schwaben EVS use therefore a cable in the centre of the tower strung by a pond instead of a cable fixed at the tower structure This construction type can be found as well on lines using garland type communication cables as on lines using freely span communication cables nbsp A 110 kV line with a communication cable hanging like a garland on the ground conductor nbsp 380 kV 110 kV line Pulverdingen Oberjettingen with two communication cables hanging like garlands on ropes above the power conductors nbsp A 110 kV line with two communication cables fixed like garlands on grounded ropes on a half of the lowest crossbar nbsp 20 kV line near Eberdingen with communication cable hanging like a garland on the lowest conductor nbsp Communication cable running down in the centre of the pylon Powerline crossings of Elbe river near Stade edit nbsp Elbe Crossing 1 center and 2 right one mast only There are two powerline crossings of the Elbe river near Stade whose pylons are among the tallest structures in Europe Elbe Crossing 1 is a group of masts providing an overhead crossing of a 220 kV three phase alternating current electric powerline across the River Elbe 43 Constructed between 1959 and 1962 as part of the line from Stade to Hamburg north it consists of four masts Each of the two portal masts is a guyed mast 50 metres 160 ft in height with a crossbeam at a height of 33 metres 108 ft One of these masts stands on the Schleswig Holstein bank of the Elbe and the other on the Lower Saxony bank Two identical carrying masts 189 metres 620 ft in height each weighing 330 tonnes 320 long tons 360 short tons ensure the necessary passage height of 75 metres 246 ft over the Elbe One stands on the island of Luhesand the other in the Buhnenfeld on the Schleswig Holstein side Because of the swampy terrain each mast s foundation is built on pilings driven into the ground The Luhesand portal mast rests on 41 pilings and the one on the Buhnenfeld on 57 In contrast to the usual construction of such lattice steel transmission towers the direction of the line passes diagonally over the square ground cross section of the pylon resulting in savings in material The two crossbeams for the admission of the six conductor cables are at a height of 166 metres 545 ft and 179 metres 587 ft The mast on the Buhnenfeld bears at a height of 30 metres 98 ft a radar facility belonging to the Water and Navigation Office of the Port of Hamburg Each portal mast has stairs and gangways for maintenance of flight safety beacons and has a hoist for heavy loads Elbe Crossing 2 is a group of transmission towers providing overhead lines for four 380 kV three phase alternating current AC circuits across the German river Elbe 44 45 It was constructed between 1976 and 1978 to supplement Elbe Crossing 1 and consists of four towers A 76 metre tall anchor pylon located in Lower Saxony on the Elbe s southern banks Two carrying pylons each 227 metres 745 ft tall One is located on the island of Luhesand and the other is near Hetlingen in Schleswig Holstein on the northern shore These pylons are the tallest pylons in Europe and the sixth tallest of the world They stand on 95 piers because of the unfavorable building ground The base of each pylon measures 45 by 45 metres 148 ft 148 ft and each pylon weighs 980 tonnes 960 long tons 1 080 short tons Crossbeams which hold up the power cables are located at heights of 172 564 190 620 and 208 metres 682 ft The crossbeams span 56 metres or 184 feet lowest crossbeam 72 metres or 236 feet middle crossbeam and 57 metres or 187 feet highest crossbeam Each pylon has a self propelled climbing elevator for maintenance of the aircraft warning lights each elevator runs inside a steel tube in the centre of the mast around which there is a spiral staircase A 62 metre tall 203 ft anchor pylon on the Schleswig Holstein side The enormous height of the two carrying pylons ensures that the passage height requirement of 75 metres 246 ft over the Elbe demanded by German authorities is met The height requirement ensures that large ships are able to enter Hamburg s deep water port Electricity pylons edit nbsp Donaumast pylon Unlike in most other countries there are only few three level or delta pylons Instead two level lattice pylons called de Donaumast are widely used These carry two cables on the upper and four cables on the lower crossarm Particularly in eastern Germany one level pylons were used too Power lines with less than 100 kV mostly run underground today Unlike in the USA and many other countries roadside medium voltage overhead lines do not exist 46 Other features edit nbsp Booms on cooling tower of Scholven Power Station carrying a 220 kV circuit leaving the power station A 302 metres tall cooling tower of Scholven Power Station at Gelsenkirchen which is used by four units of these thermal power station is equipped with three booms carrying the conductors of a 220 kV circuit leaving one of these units nbsp Pylon with observation platform near Hurth 2005 From 1977 to 2010 a 74 84 metres high strainer of powerline Oberzier Niedersechtem was equipped with a public observation deck in a height of 27 metres which was accessible by a staircase After too much vandalism occurred which endangered also the integrity of the pylon this observation deck was removed nbsp Radio relay tower on Goose Neck As in many other countries power companies in Germany use radio relay links for data transmissions In most cases the antennas used therefore are installed on lattice towers but at some sites concrete towers are used for this purpose The 87 metres tall radio relay tower on Goose Neck mountain German Gansehals near Bell is the only of these towers equipped with a public observation deck It is situated in a height of 24 metres and accessible by a staircase Summary table edit2021 Electricity in Germany Generation and consumption 14 Source Generation GWh Capacity MW Total 557 144 100 0 250 385 100 0 Fossil fuels 260 790 46 8 98 311 39 3 Renewables 233 000 41 8 137 762 55 0 Wind 113 624 20 4 63 865 25 5 Solar 49 992 9 0 58 728 23 5 Biomass and waste 49 883 9 0 10 439 4 2 Hydroelectricity 19 252 3 5 6 199 2 5 Geothermal 249 0 04 46 0 02 Nuclear 65 441 11 7 8 113 3 2 Hydroelectric pumped storage 2 087 0 4 6 199 2 5 Consumption 511 660 91 8 Exports 70 237 12 6 Imports 51 336 9 2 Distribution losses 26 582 4 8 Consumption Generation Exports Imports Distribution lossesSee also edit nbsp Germany portal nbsp Energy portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Electric power in Germany Energy in GermanyReferences edit Energy Charts www energy charts info a b Burger Bruno 14 February 2022 Offentliche Nettostromerzeugung in Deutschland im Jahr 2021 Public Net Electricity Generation in Germany in 2021 PDF in German Freiburg Germany Fraunhofer Institut fur Solare Energiesysteme ISE Retrieved 17 May 2022 Energie Info EE und das EEG2013 PDF BDEW 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 21 June 2016 a b c Burger Bruno 4 January 2021 Public Net Electricity Generation in Germany 2020 PDF Freiburg Germany Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE Retrieved 3 June 2021 Electricity generation Energy Charts www energy charts de Fraunhofer ISE Retrieved 3 June 2020 a b Renewable energy s share on German power grids reaches 55 in 2023 Reuters 3 January 2023 Germany s Energiewende 20 Years Later In 2000 Germany had an installed capacity of 121 gigawatts and it generated 577 terawatt hours which is 54 percent as much as it theoretically could have done that is 54 percent was its capacity factor In 2019 the country produced just 5 percent more 607 TW h but its installed capacity was 80 percent higher 218 1 GW because it now had two generating systems Germany Nuclear phase out postponed for three and a half months a b Kirschbaum Erik 26 January 2019 Germany to close all 84 of its coal fired power plants will rely primarily on renewable energy Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 30 January 2019 Retrieved 27 January 2019 Germany one of the world s biggest consumers of coal will shut down all 84 of its coal fired power plants over the next 19 years to meet its international commitments in the fight against climate change a government commission said Saturday Electricity Price Germany What households pay for power Strom Report Retrieved 3 March 2021 Electricity price statistics first half 2020 Statistics Explained ec europa eu EU price diagram first half 2020 Excluding VAT and other recoverable taxes and levies first half 2020 ec europa eu a b Electricity U S Energy Information Administration Countries by Electricity Exports AtlasBig 1 January 1970 Retrieved 4 February 2024 Germany Energy Market Report Energy Market Research in Germany www enerdata net 1 December 2023 Retrieved 4 February 2024 ENERGY UNION PACKAGE eur lex europa eu Retrieved 4 February 2024 a b c German numbers extracted from Energy in Sweden Facts and figures The Swedish Energy Agency in Swedish Energilaget i siffror Table Specific electricity production per inhabitant with breakdown by power source kW h person Source IEA OECD 2006 T23 Archived 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2007 T25 Archived 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008 T26 Archived 4 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2009 T25 Archived 20 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine and 2010 T49 Archived 16 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine WWF September 2016 15 signals evidence the energy transition is underway PDF Paris France WWF France Retrieved 17 September 2016 Energimyndigheten PDF www energimyndigheten se Retrieved 4 February 2024 Power generation in Germany assessment of 2017 PDF www ise fraunhofer de Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE Retrieved 29 December 2018 Burger Bruno 3 January 2024 Offentliche Nettostromerzeugung in Deutschland im Jahr 2023 Public Net Electricity Generation in Germany in 2023 PDF in German Freiburg Germany Fraunhofer Institut fur Solare Energiesysteme ISE Retrieved 12 January 2024 a b c IEA Key Stats PDF iea org Coal consumption by country 2020 Statista Erneuerbare Energien www energiewechsel de in German Retrieved 4 February 2024 Climate Change and Nuclear Power PDF assets panda org Siemensin lahjusskandaali paisuu edelleen yle 23 11 2006 IEA Key energy statistics 2006 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 October 2009 Retrieved 22 February 2011 News Archives Renewable Energy World Archived from the original on 12 March 2023 Retrieved 4 February 2024 Electricity Production From Solar and Wind in Germany 2014 PDF ise fraunhofer de Alexander Ochs 16 March 2012 The End of the Atomic Dream One Year After Fukushima the Shortfalls of Nuclear Energy Are Clearer Than Ever Worldwatch Zeitreihen zur Entwicklung der erneuerbaren Energien in Deutschland Historic data about the development of renewable energies in Germany Erneuerbare Energien in German February 2018 Retrieved 9 August 2018 http www wind energie de Number of Wind Turbines in Germany Archived 29 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 2012 Recent Facts About Photovoltaics in Germany PDF ise fraunhofer de Gerhardt Christina 9 June 2016 Germany s Renewable Energy Shift Addressing Climate Change Capitalism Nature Socialism 28 2 103 119 doi 10 1080 10455752 2016 1229803 S2CID 157399085 Renewable Energy Sources in Figures National and International Development PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2012 Germany Leads Way on Renewables Sets 45 Target by 2030 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2018 100 renewable electricity supply by 2050 Federal Ministry for Environment Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety 26 January 2011 Archived from the original on 9 May 2011 Retrieved 4 June 2011 Schultz Stefan 23 March 2011 Will Nuke Phase Out Make Offshore Farms Attractive Spiegel Online Retrieved 26 March 2011 The Wall Street Journal Online 24 April 2012 Vorrath Sophie 24 March 2021 Germany installed 100 000 home batteries in year of Corona One Step Off The Grid Archived from the original on 25 March 2021 Lehmankaupat hammentavat EU n energianeuvotteluja Helsingin Sanomat 1 3 2008 B11 Die 380 220 kV Elbekreuzung im 220 kV Netz der Nordwestdeutschen Kraftwerke AG by Hans Heino Moeller of the NWK Hamburg Die Maste der neuen 380 kV Hochspannungsfreileitung uber die Elbe NWK special edition of Der Stahlbau 48th year issues 11 and 12 pp 321 to 326 pp 360 to 366 authors Friedrich Kiessling Hans Dieter Sperl and Friedrich Wagemann Die neue 380 kV Elbekreuzung der Nordwestdeutsche Kraftwerke AG NWK special edition of Elektrizitatswirtschaft 77th year issue 10 May 8 1978 pp 341 to 352 The electricity pylon designs of the world an overview HoogspanningsNet ForumExternal links editEvans Simon Pearce Rosamund 20 September 2016 Mapped how Germany generates its electricity Carbon Brief London United Kingdom Retrieved 6 October 2016 Household electricity prices 2006 2017 CC image Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electricity sector in Germany amp oldid 1220201765 Elbe Crossing 1, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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