Romania: Cernavoda Unit 2...

Unit 2 of Romania’s sole nuclear power plant, Cernavoda, was brought back online...

Montenegro: Major renewable energy...

Two significant renewable energy projects are progressing in the village of Korita, located...

Bulgaria: Solaris Holding launches...

Solaris Holding, a joint venture between Bulgarian-German solar developer Sunotec and Eurohold Bulgaria,...

Bosnia and Herzegovina: Electricity...

Gross electricity production in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) reached 512...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsSlovenia: Solar capacity...

Slovenia: Solar capacity exceeded 1.1 GW

Slovenia added 400 MW in solar power plants last year and the total capacity exceded 1.100 MW. The country also entered the list of the top ten European Union member countries in installed solar power per capita.

At the end of 2022, Slovenia had solar facilities of an overall 697.7 MW, and with last year’s expansion the level reached 1,101.5 MW, the government said.

The increase made it one of the top ten countries in the EU in terms of installed photovoltaic capacity per capita, the announcement reads.

According to the European Market Outlook for Solar Power 2023-2027, Slovenia was ninth with 593 W per person, up 72% year on year. It was the highest growth in Europe, according to SolarPower Europe.

Ahead of Slovenia were the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Estonia, Spain, Greece and Austria, in that order. Luxembourg was at number ten.

The Government of Slovenia expects photovoltaic output to exceed 1 TWh in 2024.

“The government is satisfied that many have recognized the significance and benefits of the green transition, and hopes growth would continue in the coming years,” it stressed.

The growth demonstrates, it added, that the 3,500 MW target for 2030 in the revised Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan (NECP) is an ambitious, but realistic and achievable goal.

In its report, issued a month ago, SolarPower Europe estimated that Slovenia could reach 6.2 GW in total solar power capacity by 2030.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Romania: Cernavoda Unit 2 returns to service following safety inspections and smoke incident

Unit 2 of Romania’s sole nuclear power plant, Cernavoda, was brought back online on the morning of 27 June after a controlled shutdown on 25 June for inspections and minor repairs. Operator Nuclearelectrica confirmed that all corrective actions complied...

Montenegro: Major renewable energy projects advance in Korita

Two significant renewable energy projects are progressing in the village of Korita, located in Bijelo Polje municipality, Montenegro: a €200 million solar power plant and a wind farm with an installed capacity of 72.6 MW. The wind farm, developed by...

Montenegro: EPCG secures €25.63 million EBRD loan to expand Gvozd wind farm capacity

Montenegrin state-owned power utility EPCG has obtained government approval to borrow 25.63 million euros from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) to finance the second phase of the Gvozd wind farm, which will add 21 MW of...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!