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Solar PV, wind reach 60% of mid-day German electricity output on June 16th

29/06/2013

The International Economic Platform for Renewable Energies (IWR, Münster, Germany) reports that on June 16th, 2013 wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) generation peaked at over 60% of German electricity output, a new record.

The International Economic Platform for Renewable Energies (IWR, Münster, Germany) reports that on June 16th, 2013 wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) generation peaked at over 60% of German electricity output, a new record.

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Wind and solar together met 60% of demand

Between 2 PM and 3 PM on June 16th, the output from PV plants reached 20.3 GW, while wind turbines supplied 9.3 GW, for a total of 29.6 GW. This represented 61% of the 48.5 GW of total generation during this hour. Coal, gas, nuclear and oil generation comprised only 18.9 GW during the hour.

“There is currently no country in the world where wind and solar systems can ensure about 60 percent of the power required for power plant performance,” said IWR Director Norbert Allnoch.

“The data refute the claims repeatedly put forward in debates on the energy transition that a power supply with so much wind and solar can not work in an industrialized country like Germany.”

IWR notes that the previous record was set a day earlier on June 15th, 2013, when wind and solar output reached 59%. The company bases its analysis on data from the European Energy Exchange (EEX, Leipzig, Germany).