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Germany Produces Record-Breaking 5.1 Terawatt Hours of Solar Energy In One Month

oritonic1 writes "Germany is rapidly developing a tradition of shattering its own renewable energy goals and leaving the rest of the world in the dust. This past July was no exception, as the nation produced 5.1 TWh of solar power (PDF), beating not only its own solar production record, but also eclipsing the record 5TWh of wind power produced by German turbines in January. Renewables are doing so well, in fact, that one of Germany's biggest utilities is threatening to migrate to Turkey."

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  1. Details from the English report by steveha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here are the numbers from the chart on page 4:

    Electricity production: first seven months 2013

    Uranium -- 52.1 TWh
    Brown Coal -- 85.1 TWh
    Hard Coal -- 65.5 TWh
    Gas -- 23.8 TWh
    Wind -- 24.2 TWh
    Solar -- 19.4 TWh
    Run of River -- 10.5 TWh

    Total energy production was about 280.6 TWh, renewable was 54.1 TWh (or about 19.3% of all energy production).

    Also interesting is the chart on page 9, "Monthly Production Solar". It is a bar graph, so these numbers are mostly my eyeball estimates:

    January: 0.35 TWh (exact number)
    February: 0.6 TWh (my estimate)
    March: 2.3 TWh (my estimate)
    April: 3.1 TWh (my estimate)
    May: 3.3 TWh (my estimate)
    June: 4.3 TWh (my estimate)
    July: 5.1 TWh (exact number)

    So winter really is bad for solar in Germany, but other months it isn't bad. Interestingly, wind does better in Winter... chart on page 10, "Monthly Production Wind", same deal as above (mostly eyeball estimates with two exact numbers):

    January: 5.0 TWh (exact number)
    February: 3.2 TWh (my estimate)
    March: 4.7 TWh (my estimate)
    April: 3.3 TWh (my estimate)
    May: 2.8 TWh (my estimate)
    June: 3.3 TWh (my estimate)
    July: 1.7 TWh (exact number)

    It doesn't look like renewables will be able to produce 100% of power needs any time soon in Germany, but they are producing about 1/5 of all energy. More than I expected.

    Critics claim that Germany is paying six times as much for power, to finance all the renewables. (Per that article, 18 billion Euros paid on power that has a market value of 3 billion Euros) See also the Wikipedia article on Renewable energy in Germany.

    Presumably though this is an investment and the renewables will keep providing power once their costs have been paid fully. I'm wondering if, over the operational lifetime of the solar and wind power equipment, they will wind up producing enough power that they will have actually been a good investment?

    IMHO it would make more sense for them to keep the nuclear power plants and try to shut down coal plants, but that's not their plan.

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