Wind power by country

Summary

The worldwide total cumulative installed electricity generation capacity from wind power has increased rapidly since the start of the third millennium, and as of the end of 2022, it amounts to almost 900 GW. Since 2010, more than half of all new wind power was added outside the traditional markets of Europe and North America, mainly driven by the continuing boom in China and India. China alone had over 40% of the world's capacity by 2022.[3]

Share of electricity production from wind, 2022[1]
Global map of wind speed at 100 m above surface level[2]

Wind power is used on a commercial basis in more than half of all the countries of the world.[4] Denmark produced 55% of its electricity from wind in 2022, a larger share than any other country. Latvia's wind capacity grew by 75%, the largest percent increase in 2022.[3]

In November 2018, wind power generation in Scotland was higher than the country's electricity consumption during the month.[5] Wind power's share of worldwide electricity usage in 2022 was 7.3%, up from 8.9% from the prior year.[3] In Europe, wind was 11.2% of generation in 2022.[3] In 2018, upcoming wind power markets rose from 8% to 10% across the Middle East, Latin America, South East Asia, and Africa.[6]

Generation by country edit

 
Yearly wind generation by continent[3]
 
Wind generation by country, 2021[3]

Number of countries with wind
capacities in the gigawatt-scale

Growing number of wind gigawatt-markets
  Over 1 GW
  Over 10 GW
  Over 100 GW
  • 2019  
    2014                    

The following table lists these data for each country:

Data are sourced from Ember and refer to the year 2022 unless otherwise specified.[3] The table only includes countries with more than 0.1 TWh of generation.

See also edit

  •   Wind power portal

References edit

  1. ^ "Share of electricity production from wind". Our World in Data. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  2. ^ "Global Wind Atlas". Technical University of Denmark (DTU). Archived from the original on 18 January 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Yearly electricity data". ember-climate.org. 6 December 2023. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
  4. ^ "Countries - Online Access - The wind power - Wind energy market intelligence". The Wind Power. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  5. ^ "'Historic' month as wind power meets 109% of energy demands". STV. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  6. ^ "The wind energy capacity in 2018".