I lived on the border with germany around the time they started putting in the subsidies and everything. you could see this enormous leap in real life happen it was so cool
I had a look in to this - Russia has quite a lot of low carbon energy sources, but barely any wind or solar - certainly not in the TWh scale. In 2023 they produces 0.46% of energy from wind and solar. The rest is from biomass, hydro power, and nuclear. It makes sense - even in summary Moscow (as point of reference) gets about 4-5 hours of usable daylight, so solar really isn't that great for them. Don't know about wind, though
I lived on the border with germany around the time they started putting in the subsidies and everything. you could see this enormous leap in real life happen it was so cool
Do a comparison to other energy sources like coal, oil, nuclear. And maybe per capita as well
interesting would be the comparison the the respective yearly usage in TWh of electric energy in total per country
Russia is not in the list?
I had a look in to this - Russia has quite a lot of low carbon energy sources, but barely any wind or solar - certainly not in the TWh scale. In 2023 they produces 0.46% of energy from wind and solar. The rest is from biomass, hydro power, and nuclear. It makes sense - even in summary Moscow (as point of reference) gets about 4-5 hours of usable daylight, so solar really isn't that great for them. Don't know about wind, though
@@jabezcrisp7899 Thats interesting and alittle surprising. Thanks for sharing
Renewable energy production always has a relationship with country size....
The Netherlands is very smalll and produces a lot relatively.