The Giga-watt-hour is a unit of energy, not power. The power is measured in watts. The watts produced by a solar pannel changes every minute throughout the day, depending on the intensity of the sun and the presence of clouds. The annual production in the total amount of energy. The power X the time = the energy. When you pay your electricity bill, you pay for the energy you consumed, not the power. Unless you have a hybrid billing.
@@topgame1729Words like "Gobar" and "Bhakt" are related to Hindu culture and Religion. Aren't you Racist and faggot to use them in an insulted way??? 😇🤗
Thank you Indians for your purchase. According to the International Energy Agency, China produces 85% of the world's solar cells, 88% of solar-grade polysilicon, and 97% of the silicon ingots and wafers needed for the core of solar cells. Solar panel prices have fallen 99% since 2009.😂
For the fact that Germany is very small in area, densely populated and in a region with relatively few hours of sunshine per year, the expansion achieved so far is strong! 👍🏻🇩🇪👍🏻
Sorry, gotta disagree. It’s probably one of their worst decisions ever the trillions of dollars they spent on wind and solar have been a financial ecological and power generation disaster the idea of putting solar panels in Germany as a joke. I’ve been there many times all you have to do is say Germany and solar power, and laugh, this goes a great deal to contributing to the mess. They’re in right now the idea that you could put your base load on 100% imported natural gas and flex the rest on solar and wind. Well let’s just say they’re not moving their manufacturing offshore for fun. Basing technological and political decisions on fantasy is the definition of insanity and well Get you exactly to where they are right now. And of course you have to realize this presentation is not actually generated power. It’s potentially generated power by the amount of panels they put up, which is of course, totally misleading. Mind you I believe many aspects of German, culture society, are far superior to mine as an American but their long term strategic planning sucks.
@@The_Touring_Jedi Who laughs last, laughs best. Wait and see, the German economy has survived completely different crises and was stronger afterwards than before!
@@oli-barelin no actually, I agree I do hope they survive and come back stronger but it doesn’t distract from my point this is a self inflicted damage that will be paid for by the German people for no good reason. And yes, they’ve shown great resiliency in coming back from issues say the damage from World War II, etc., I just believe this is all just made up by a very few borderline, insane politicians, and now the German people have to pay for it.
Its nice to see that countries are competing for solar energy😊 India is also targeting 500000 GWh by 2030 With many of top 10 world's biggest solar plants situated in india(biggest is Bhadla solar power plant, Rajashthan) and many in progress India and China will be most renewable energy producing countries in the world
Con el índice actual de natalidad de la India en la medida que mejoren su nivel de vida y comiencen a instalar sistemáticamente aparatos de aire acondicionado en un país muy caluroso, las expectativas de consumo eléctrico serán demoledoras...
@@bot_nemetronicus Las expectativas de aumento del consumo eléctrico en la India son espeluznantes. Europa está haciendo un gran esfuerzo de reducción de emisión de carbono mediante la instalación de renovables que me temo no se está realizando en EEUU en la misma medida..
@@franciscoramonlopezaragon8500 the historical and current emissions by western countries & US are more frightening. Even India and China COMBINED! cant reach it soon. Provided in west they aren't electricity bill concious, and they mostly dont have switches for appliances.
Spain can actually become a net exporter of solar energy to the rest of Europe. I have seen some calculations where they say that if Spain converts 15% of its farmland into solar power plants then it can actually provide energy to all of Europe for the whole daytime.
¿Y comeremos sol???... ¿Importaremos ese 15% de alimentos contaminando un 15% más en su transporte desde el exterior???... Un plan sin fisuras 👌 En España hay una cantidad enorme de sueldo sin cultivar al igual que infinidad de tejados en viviendas y zonas industriales, que se deberían cubrir antes de destrozar tierra cultivada, que lleva siglos cuidándose, alimentando generaciones y proporcionando RIQUEZA en todos los sentidos. Dejar de cultivar nuestro propio alimento para depender de importaciones que contaminan y del control en precios y producción de terceros países, es un suicidio alimentario...
Therefore, it is fair to say that China has made more efforts and contributions to environmental protection than any other country in the past few decades.
The expansion in China started after Germany gave them the technology in 2012-2013. During these years the Chinese took over the market (of course heavily subsidized by the regime) and as a result the German companies went bankrupt and Germany almost stopped expansion. You can see that exactly in the graphic.
@@hugohabicht9957 What does per capita mean to the planet? Countries with larger populations can make greater contributions to the environment, but also pay efforts and costs that smaller countries do not. It’s you who should stop talking nonsense, this is not a contest to satisfy your vanity!
Brazil has grown in the last two years at the initiative of the governments of the federated States, notably those in the Northeast region of the country. Now, the new federal government that took over in 2023 has started to invest heavily in solar energy as well as wind and green hydrogen. Brazil, with a huge territory with a high degree of insolation (and also winds), will grow quickly and absolutely in this ranking.
@@alexandremaireno-ni4ecour previous Governments didn't listen to the people when it came to energy production, that's the reason why our growth has been so slow, besides, with the newest investments, we'll be leading this rank within 10 years if all that goes as planned
Germany started the competition, or rather the trend, at the beginning of the 2000s. At that time, many German manufacturers produced the panels. In 2012, many German companies relocated production to China and the Chinese stole the technology. Or you could also say that the Germans gave it to them. Then from 2013-2014 the Chinese started flooding the world with their panels. In 2014, the German government stopped promoting solar energy because it did not want to subsidize Chinese companies. There were no longer any panel companies in Germany. 130,000 jobs were lost. From 2014, Germany fell back in the ranking.
@@ucupcupin3422It's true, after modi gov came in power, government gave a hard push to the renewable sector, and most of the set targets in the sector were achieved before time. Government had to revise and increase the capacity installation targets, since previously set targets were easily achievable
@@ucupcupin3422 what kind of discrimination you are talking about. I have been working in the energy sector for about 7 years and felt the change through the government policies and incentives intorduced by the government to promote renewable energy and local manufacturing. Just Google what is PLI scheme and you will know. Similar to PLI, there has been many kinds of incentives the government has been giving to promote renewable energy, and hence it is visible in the results
I was at a solar energy conference in 2019. The calculation for Germany was that an equivalent of 1/20 of the land already used for farms needs to be covered in solar panels for the whole of Germany to be powered by solar. Solar panel areas also acted as safezones for local species, since no other work on the land was done afterwards.
The solution that solar really needs is energy storage so that we get the benefits of renewable energy at night or in bad weather. The grid also needs better interconnectivity so that excess generated power can be sent where it's really needed.
The small country of the Netherlands is the world leader per capita. One in five Dutch houses has installed solar panels on the roof. But the Netherlands is succumbing to its own success, too much power is generated with solar energy and the electricity grid can no longer cope. Since the Netherlands has cut itself off from foreign gas exports, all Dutch people now want solar panels.
If its like this on the g'damn Netherlands I can't even imagine what'll happen if a country like Chile gets all it's houses covered in solar panels, the UV is so high there it's mostly highlighted in pink/violet
Poland seems to be the booming newcommer. They are not in the list but made some of the biggest jumps in the last years. Also they invented solar glass and produce nice ceramic solar roof tiles that look much better then the usual panels
@@ArmageddonIsHerethat's a THEIR problem, we're not worried about that, we still growing our renewable sources wich btw sits at 80% of our power(60% only for hydro power)
@@ArmageddonIsHere and also, 10GWh/year is the growth(installed capacity), not the production(this you multiply by 4 or 5 thousand hours so you have the generation)
Fact: Unlike what many people think, total annual solar generation /solar panel is remarkably similar in all regions in the world...this is primarily because of solar power efficiency increases in colder temperature...also, colder countries get longer day duration in summer....the only exceptions are cold deserts where solar generation would be very high because of lack of rain and cold temperature...and also tropical rain forest...where solar generation would be very low due to high temperature and too much rain. The other exception is if the solar panel gets covered with snow for long time.
India would be #3 in 2023 which is progressive implementation by the government & mindful for environment. Remarkable for a developing economy that has managed to achieve highest GDP growth rate despite 45% energy from NON fossil fuel sources unlike other countries who polluted the world during industrial revolution and in recent decades.
@@truesouth4784Based on these figures in 2022: Australia - 1,492 kWh/cap, US - 614 kWh/cap, China - 305 kWh/cap. Populations used: Australia - 26 million China - 1,400 million US - 336 million
@@simoncrooke1644 Right, I just wanted to point out that it wasn't the actual top 3, mistook production for installed power. Also, as someone else wrote, Netherlands: 1011kWh/cap
Is it really the energy actually generated or just the nominal power installed??? Another question: What's the relevance of accumulating the values over time?
Over forty years ago I fitted my house with a solar water heater. These devices don't directly produce electricity but they replace electricity that would have been used to heat the water. They were very popular here in Australia at the time. I dont think this graph would include that.
@@sarveshsinha1530 In Australia and many other countries many individual houses have solar panels that provide free power to the household and feed extra power into the grid. Most of Australia's solar power is this kind. In my city about 30% of houses have this set up.
@@rais1953 In India, we have similar scheme but electricity consumption is low for avg household. So even if they install it will take 10+ years to recover amount. In other countries it takes around 6-7 years max right?
@@sarveshsinha1530 Depending on location and the household's power usage the panels can pay for themselves in as little as 4 years or up to 8 years. With increasing use of air conditioning and electric cars charging at home etc this time is likely to reduce even further.
Question, is this new installed capacity, or total generation capacity, if it's the latter, why is there a decrease happening? Does it mean the UK government removed solar?
@@marcsteppi2192 lol.. How can natzi Germany with no gas and deindustrialisation process is so much better than China with largest GDP(PPP) in the world and still growing? You natzis love to live in delusional Alice in natzi wonderland🤣🤣🤣
India will be among the top 2 within the next couple of years. PM Modi has recently launched PMSURYA Mission, which will transform India's solar energy landscape
Take any such list, china will always be there on the list somewhere down and as time progresses, china slowly goes up and there pops India in the bottom of the list. Then the two countries start taking leaps where china reaches top and India will be at 2nd or 3rd at the end of the show.
It is amazing how a so-called third-world country (India) is always in the top 5 when it comes to amazing things. India is a superpower and always has been.
Installed capacity is not the same as actual power generated every day. Also because it fluctuates too much, and energy storage solutions are still not where they need to be, we can't rely on the solar capacity 24x7 yet.
It can be used on existing surface batteries and solar are ideal distributed energy solutions. Providing redundancy for grid failures. Coal gas and oil are also land hungry and far more destructive.
Yes, You go on your vehicle and start driving around, clean them up. dont forget sand storm will wreck havoc around, also bush fire dust. The soil also creates problem with moisture and vegetation. I have been to a solar farm producing 25MW.
This video confuses installed power with produced energy. In Germany that is the installed power +60Gw for example, while now, just as I write, the production slightly exceeds 30Gwh, we are in the summer and the production is well above the average considering the winter months, above all considering that the peak of + 60Gwh which is the maximum according to the installed power is almost never reached (only with true haze and an unprecedented, zero clouds). This is very false.
@@ILoveMonorails96 Actually winter is my favourite time of year here (Gold Coast, Queensland). Today we had similar temps to London (min 15-Max 24). I wouldn't like a British winter though, and constant 35C temps with high humidity like our summers aren't fun except for tourists.
@@ILoveMonorails96 As you'd expect, Australia climates vary greatly. We currently have snow down on the Snowy Mountains. Right now it's 3C in Thredbo and 23 in Cairns at 8am. I'm a paramedic and years ago we had a recruitment drive in the IK trying to entice British paramedics to the "Land of sunshine and sand". A couple got posted out west in summer which meant they went from a London winter to constant 45C days week after week with not a drop of rain for months. Northern NSW coast has the best weather, I think. Warm and not too humid, and mild in winter. Melbourne has 4 seasons in one day, the tropics a wet monsoonal summer with the odd cyclone and the outback is just freezing in winter and like an oven in summer.
Солнечная энергетика это просто модный тренд. Если посчитать, сколько вы тратите энергии, чтобы получить новую энергию и сохранить природу, то атомная энергетика намного лучше солнечной и ветряной.
Fun fact, North Africa is rich in Solar power, but we won't use it to generate solar for wealthy Europe, because that entails Europe actually beneficiating North Africa and surrounding states.
@@indiancowpeedrinker9241 Sahi Al Bukhari 5686 says Camel Urine is a medicine. Some people in Medina were not feeling well, so the Prophet (ﷺ) ordered them to follow his shepherd, i.e. his camels, and drink their urine (as a medicine)
This is a cool racing chart but many countries are already moving away from solar and wind given their high cost, environmental damage and failure to meet power demands. It would take 450 times as many solar farms to equal the power output of just one Nuclear power plant. Nuclear plants by far surpass any other renewable source for efficiency, length of service and cost.
But is you would do it per land mass available, the Netherland would be on top and Australia way down. For a tiny little country the netherlands is doing real good
As other people mentioned big land so cheaper land outside cities. But also government rebates for home owners to install solar panels on their roof. Used to be $1850 rebate, now down to $1400 rebate
@@marcsteppi2192 It is from 7:16 and it climbs significantly. Most of the Brazilian energy matrix is based on renewable hydropower. Just recently solar dropped cost enough to be competitive, so Brasil is rapidly investing in it more.
@@humpydumpy2432 isiliye ek kahaawat hai "when all your opposition gets united then the ruling king is actually honest & powerful." India took 65 years to reach 1 trillion economy but only 7 years to reach 2 trillion, 2 years to 3 trillion & only 4 years 2027 to 5 trillion.... all thanks to nda government
Well done .. all the countries. Special credits to Brazil and France whose primary source of energy is not even solar and still low carbon....Brazil with Hydro and France with Nuclear.
OK so can anyone explain what happened to the UK with around 4OGB installed capacity in 1987 and then drops out of the chart completely (from position 2) - did it scrap them? It then reappears suddenly in 2012 with 500GB+🤷♂️
@@alexandref5100 Sim, mas cada ano elas perdem mais participação na nossa matriz pois paramos de construir novas hidreletricas. Já faz uns 4 anos que a capacidade instalada não passa de 109.000 MW.
@@alexandref5100a 12 anos atrás as hidreletricas geravam mais de 90% de nossa eletricidade. Hj geram pouco mais de 60% e continuam em queda livre, até 2030 deve cair para uns 40% ou até menos que isso.
@@edneydenis7856 Na verdade elas nem estão em queda livre, as outras fontes energéticas que estão crescendo muito, na crise hídrica de 2021 alem de importar energia de outros países o Brasil teve que recorrer as eólicas do nordeste, que estão bem em alta ultimamente, em breve vão exportar para a Europa.
O Brasil cresceu nos últimos dois anos por iniciativa dos governos estaduais, MUITO principalmente os do Nordeste. Agora, o governo federal atual passou a atuar/investir e o Brasil certamente crescerá absurdamente tanto em solar como em éolica e hidrogênio verde.
This is the annual generation by country.
Would be more interesting to have this information per inhabitant/house/household
The Giga-watt-hour is a unit of energy, not power. The power is measured in watts. The watts produced by a solar pannel changes every minute throughout the day, depending on the intensity of the sun and the presence of clouds. The annual production in the total amount of energy. The power X the time = the energy. When you pay your electricity bill, you pay for the energy you consumed, not the power. Unless you have a hybrid billing.
It is the ADVERTISED MAXIMUM OUTPUT of the installed panels. Real-world electricity production is a tiny fraction of that.
@@kyleb3754really?
Germany does not generate more solar power than Australia.
Growth of 91000 GWH
in Modi Reign
From 3800 GWH to
95000 GWH
Staggering 2500 %😮
He will double this in next 5 years.
mean while CHINA: 4000%
@@xiaofang902 China is communist and is 3x bigger than India
@@xiaofang902 congratulations 👏
@@xiaofang902ccp is a great party
After 2014, it was Modi's development drive that led India to climb on the Solar charts so rapidly
😂gobar bakth
@@topgame1729Words like "Gobar" and "Bhakt" are related to Hindu culture and Religion. Aren't you Racist and faggot to use them in an insulted way??? 😇🤗
Yes
@@topgame1729ok daIIah bhakt
@@RoKuSa007 😂ab gand jali tere
It's clearly visible to the PM Modi government doing a fabulous job... Appreciate and lots of support for Current government 😊😊
Gobar Bhakt
It is clearly visible you know nothing
@@tilapiadave3234 it's clearly visible that you are hater... And doing nothing and blaming others for your failure....
@@tilapiadave3234its clearly see , you’re numbskull
Is there a garbage program over there? Or everyone likes to live on top of a landfill?
After 2014, the rise of India is nearly exponential.
Yeah some khangress mullas katuas will never accept it
Due to bjp
100%😂❤
Thank you Indians for your purchase. According to the International Energy Agency, China produces 85% of the world's solar cells, 88% of solar-grade polysilicon, and 97% of the silicon ingots and wafers needed for the core of solar cells. Solar panel prices have fallen 99% since 2009.😂
@@user-wq4fb7zt8y Indian businessman buy Solar from China and put their logo make in India 🤣
For the fact that Germany is very small in area, densely populated and in a region with relatively few hours of sunshine per year, the expansion achieved so far is strong! 👍🏻🇩🇪👍🏻
Sorry, gotta disagree. It’s probably one of their worst decisions ever the trillions of dollars they spent on wind and solar have been a financial ecological and power generation disaster the idea of putting solar panels in Germany as a joke. I’ve been there many times all you have to do is say Germany and solar power, and laugh, this goes a great deal to contributing to the mess. They’re in right now the idea that you could put your base load on 100% imported natural gas and flex the rest on solar and wind. Well let’s just say they’re not moving their manufacturing offshore for fun. Basing technological and political decisions on fantasy is the definition of insanity and well Get you exactly to where they are right now. And of course you have to realize this presentation is not actually generated power. It’s potentially generated power by the amount of panels they put up, which is of course, totally misleading. Mind you I believe many aspects of German, culture society, are far superior to mine as an American but their long term strategic planning sucks.
👏👏👏
Yes German economy is collapsing green Agenda is the future for Germany...😂😂😂😂
@@The_Touring_Jedi Who laughs last, laughs best. Wait and see, the German economy has survived completely different crises and was stronger afterwards than before!
@@oli-barelin no actually, I agree I do hope they survive and come back stronger but it doesn’t distract from my point this is a self inflicted damage that will be paid for by the German people for no good reason. And yes, they’ve shown great resiliency in coming back from issues say the damage from World War II, etc., I just believe this is all just made up by a very few borderline, insane politicians, and now the German people have to pay for it.
In the hundred years of time, world failed to measure the true potential and talent of JAPAN. INDIA🤝JAPAN
Yeah, but like they gotta give up the third spot, the more we make, the more they do like bruv chill
@@agrajyadav2951😂
See India’s meteoric rise from somewhere near the bottom to top 4. At present pace, we will be #3 in a year or two 🇮🇳🇮🇳🩷🩷
That rise after 2014 is because of Modi's development drive of which he isnt appreciated
Will be one number one in 2024
@@irenechan7193😂in your dreams
@@irenechan7193
😂😂😂
No1 by 2040.
Its nice to see that countries are competing for solar energy😊
India is also targeting 500000 GWh by 2030
With many of top 10 world's biggest solar plants situated in india(biggest is Bhadla solar power plant, Rajashthan) and many in progress
India and China will be most renewable energy producing countries in the world
india is only good at talking, no concrete action
Con el índice actual de natalidad de la India en la medida que mejoren su nivel de vida y comiencen a instalar sistemáticamente aparatos de aire acondicionado en un país muy caluroso, las expectativas de consumo eléctrico serán demoledoras...
@@franciscoramonlopezaragon8500but still much less than that of usa and Europe's😊
@@bot_nemetronicus Las expectativas de aumento del consumo eléctrico en la India son espeluznantes. Europa está haciendo un gran esfuerzo de reducción de emisión de carbono mediante la instalación de renovables que me temo no se está realizando en EEUU en la misma medida..
@@franciscoramonlopezaragon8500 the historical and current emissions by western countries & US are more frightening. Even India and China COMBINED! cant reach it soon. Provided in west they aren't electricity bill concious, and they mostly dont have switches for appliances.
On July 2023 for a first time in Spain main Energy source was Solar. proud to collaborate on this achievement with my panels.
Spain will save Germany when you reach your full solar capacity in the country. 🇪🇺
Spain can actually become a net exporter of solar energy to the rest of Europe. I have seen some calculations where they say that if Spain converts 15% of its farmland into solar power plants then it can actually provide energy to all of Europe for the whole daytime.
¿Y comeremos sol???... ¿Importaremos ese 15% de alimentos contaminando un 15% más en su transporte desde el exterior???...
Un plan sin fisuras 👌
En España hay una cantidad enorme de sueldo sin cultivar al igual que infinidad de tejados en viviendas y zonas industriales, que se deberían cubrir antes de destrozar tierra cultivada, que lleva siglos cuidándose, alimentando generaciones y proporcionando RIQUEZA en todos los sentidos.
Dejar de cultivar nuestro propio alimento para depender de importaciones que contaminan y del control en precios y producción de terceros países, es un suicidio alimentario...
Adani jese froad ko modi ne contract diye Desh bech ke
This is why I get annoyed when we talk about renewable energy here in the US someone always says "What about China?"
Therefore, it is fair to say that China has made more efforts and contributions to environmental protection than any other country in the past few decades.
The expansion in China started after Germany gave them the technology in 2012-2013.
During these years the Chinese took over the market (of course heavily subsidized by the regime) and as a result the German companies went bankrupt and Germany almost stopped expansion. You can see that exactly in the graphic.
@@inotoni6148it’s naive to tell a story about the industry dynamics in two economic powers.
Not per capita by a wide margin. Get your numbers right before posting nonsense 🤦♂️
@@hugohabicht9957 What does per capita mean to the planet? Countries with larger populations can make greater contributions to the environment, but also pay efforts and costs that smaller countries do not. It’s you who should stop talking nonsense, this is not a contest to satisfy your vanity!
If you check the data then you will realise that china is the largest polluter of the whole planet followed by the US
Brazil has grown in the last two years at the initiative of the governments of the federated States, notably those in the Northeast region of the country. Now, the new federal government that took over in 2023 has started to invest heavily in solar energy as well as wind and green hydrogen. Brazil, with a huge territory with a high degree of insolation (and also winds), will grow quickly and absolutely in this ranking.
Don't talk about thinks you have no knowledge of. Federated States 😂😂😂
@@charlesallin I didn't get the joke, sorry. Brazil is a federation, like some other countries in the world. Do you understand? 😂😂
@@charlesallin, if you have the knowledge, , can you please explain your comment to us?
The largest country within the tropics should already lead this rank (or be in the top 3, at least)
@@alexandremaireno-ni4ecour previous Governments didn't listen to the people when it came to energy production, that's the reason why our growth has been so slow, besides, with the newest investments, we'll be leading this rank within 10 years if all that goes as planned
Honestly, this is an amazing trend for the entire world
Indeed
Germany started the competition, or rather the trend, at the beginning of the 2000s. At that time, many German manufacturers produced the panels. In 2012, many German companies relocated production to China and the Chinese stole the technology. Or you could also say that the Germans gave it to them. Then from 2013-2014 the Chinese started flooding the world with their panels. In 2014, the German government stopped promoting solar energy because it did not want to subsidize Chinese companies. There were no longer any panel companies in Germany. 130,000 jobs were lost. From 2014, Germany fell back in the ranking.
不一定,事物都有两面性,大量的太阳能板覆盖在地球表面将光热能转换成电能,意味着地球表面失去了这些热量,如果规模足够大,也会对气候产生影响。
Power of BJP 🚩
what 😂. lauhg
@@ucupcupin3422 you keep on laughing. Pls consult doctor
@@ucupcupin3422It's true, after modi gov came in power, government gave a hard push to the renewable sector, and most of the set targets in the sector were achieved before time. Government had to revise and increase the capacity installation targets, since previously set targets were easily achievable
@@AdityaKumar-ak discrimination
@@ucupcupin3422 what kind of discrimination you are talking about. I have been working in the energy sector for about 7 years and felt the change through the government policies and incentives intorduced by the government to promote renewable energy and local manufacturing. Just Google what is PLI scheme and you will know. Similar to PLI, there has been many kinds of incentives the government has been giving to promote renewable energy, and hence it is visible in the results
I was at a solar energy conference in 2019. The calculation for Germany was that an equivalent of 1/20 of the land already used for farms needs to be covered in solar panels for the whole of Germany to be powered by solar. Solar panel areas also acted as safezones for local species, since no other work on the land was done afterwards.
Japan 💪
The solution that solar really needs is energy storage so that we get the benefits of renewable energy at night or in bad weather. The grid also needs better interconnectivity so that excess generated power can be sent where it's really needed.
Hey, 40% independence from coal based electricity is also 40% improvement in so many ways.
Imagine the boost to the economy if most of daytime energy need is fulfilled by solar generated electricity.
蒸馏塔式太阳能发电没有这个问题,大规模的储存一般都是转化为水的重力势能,也可以并入电网
@@acswain6720I think most industrial energy requirement is at daytime. Residentials too (air-conditioning).
India has the world biggest solar park Bandra solar park; Rajasthan
And the biggest scam call centers
@@indiancowpeedrinker9241camel Muth drinkers pork eaters 😂
@indiancowpeedrinker9241 And you people have the biggest thief exhibition. The London Museum.
@@indiancowpeedrinker9241Hello sir we are calling you from Microsoft Tech support.
Unfortunately people will only remember pollution and 0,7 toilets per capita 😢
The small country of the Netherlands is the world leader per capita. One in five Dutch houses has installed solar panels on the roof. But the Netherlands is succumbing to its own success, too much power is generated with solar energy and the electricity grid can no longer cope. Since the Netherlands has cut itself off from foreign gas exports, all Dutch people now want solar panels.
People need storages in their own houses now.
If its like this on the g'damn Netherlands I can't even imagine what'll happen if a country like Chile gets all it's houses covered in solar panels, the UV is so high there it's mostly highlighted in pink/violet
Actually, Australia has the highest percentage of housing with solar in the world at 31%
Australia has a similar population to the Netherlands and is much higher up the list
Solar just keeps getting cheaper and more efficient - the rate of adoption is increasing at an increasing rate
Poland seems to be the booming newcommer. They are not in the list but made some of the biggest jumps in the last years. Also they invented solar glass and produce nice ceramic solar roof tiles that look much better then the usual panels
3500 GWH to 95000 GWH
In just 8 yrs
Amezing Bharat❤
🙏🙏
Japan's penetration rate is amazing even though it is directly connected to the land area.
India -> 70.01 GW installed (Solar energy ) as of 30th June 2023. So currently 3rd globally.
What's the data for Japan or Brazil which should be at 3rd?
@@amodmishra3030 Brazil in no where there for 3 rd spot it's 3 times behind Japan and India😅
@@Aryankumar-ge1ql I don't even remember why did I even said Brazil, lmao. Even I am surprised, lmao.
I installed my solar panels in 2010..I contributed to the rise of Italy in those years! 😂
Congrats. I hope to increase the tally of my country soon
Proudly added our solar panels to Germany's energy output in 2020. :-)
China definitely inspires on scale it does
但人均我们是发展中国家,只不过我们人口大国
China growth is marvelous
The acceleration of the power generation in some countries is simply amazing 🙂
yes! It’s me 🇮🇳 😊
@@ricosu192Brazil>
😃👍
Trumps support of "traditional energy's" pushed the rest of world towards solar.😊
@@ricosu192 china grew way more but sure
Brazil going full speed with solar, installing more than 10GWh per year 🚀
10 GwH per year = full speed ahead?🤔
India is targeting *500,000* GwH (500K GwH) by 2030 = 7 years from now.
Brazil is a joke. 😂
@@ArmageddonIsHerethat's a THEIR problem, we're not worried about that, we still growing our renewable sources wich btw sits at 80% of our power(60% only for hydro power)
@@ArmageddonIsHere and also, 10GWh/year is the growth(installed capacity), not the production(this you multiply by 4 or 5 thousand hours so you have the generation)
@@michelramon5786The unit for effect of production is GW. GWh is the summarized capacity.
India has also created International solar alliance and 100+ countries are part of it .
In 2024 India is Next to China in Solar Power generation
China ❤
Fact: Unlike what many people think, total annual solar generation /solar panel is remarkably similar in all regions in the world...this is primarily because of solar power efficiency increases in colder temperature...also, colder countries get longer day duration in summer....the only exceptions are cold deserts where solar generation would be very high because of lack of rain and cold temperature...and also tropical rain forest...where solar generation would be very low due to high temperature and too much rain. The other exception is if the solar panel gets covered with snow for long time.
India would be #3 in 2023 which is progressive implementation by the government & mindful for environment. Remarkable for a developing economy that has managed to achieve highest GDP growth rate despite 45% energy from NON fossil fuel sources unlike other countries who polluted the world during industrial revolution and in recent decades.
Get deodorant sanjeet
This is awesome!!! More and more especially in the US since the climate legislation just passed a year ago many more projects coming onboard👍🏿
Would be interesting to see per capita production
In that case, I think Australia would dominate those figures.
@@truesouth4784Based on these figures in 2022: Australia - 1,492 kWh/cap, US - 614 kWh/cap, China - 305 kWh/cap.
Populations used:
Australia - 26 million
China - 1,400 million
US - 336 million
Japan: 826kw/cap
Italy: 450KW/cap
@@AttilioScotolati kWh not kW. The former is energy, the latter is power. One is a quantity and the other is a rate.
@@simoncrooke1644 Right, I just wanted to point out that it wasn't the actual top 3, mistook production for installed power. Also, as someone else wrote, Netherlands: 1011kWh/cap
On a similar topic, storage capacity over time would be a good graph
Shh don't blow their covers
Is it really the energy actually generated or just the nominal power installed???
Another question: What's the relevance of accumulating the values over time?
O Brasil têm muito a crescer ainda, na minha casa instalei os painéis em 2021 agora em 2023 ampliei o sistema.
O Brasil demorou a acordar.
Between 93’ and 96´ France was 2nd in the world for PV production. Kind of proud 😊
But the companies selling PV to individual houses are usually scams
Je sais de quoi je parle
México in the list!!
💙🇺🇲🇲🇽💙 Love it!!
Interesting information 👍
It's 2024 and India is world third largest generator of solar energy. Jai Hind 🇮🇳
Over forty years ago I fitted my house with a solar water heater. These devices don't directly produce electricity but they replace electricity that would have been used to heat the water. They were very popular here in Australia at the time. I dont think this graph would include that.
It looks like more about govt related projects
@@sarveshsinha1530 In Australia and many other countries many individual houses have solar panels that provide free power to the household and feed extra power into the grid. Most of Australia's solar power is this kind. In my city about 30% of houses have this set up.
@@rais1953 In India, we have similar scheme but electricity consumption is low for avg household.
So even if they install it will take 10+ years to recover amount.
In other countries it takes around 6-7 years max right?
@@sarveshsinha1530 Depending on location and the household's power usage the panels can pay for themselves in as little as 4 years or up to 8 years. With increasing use of air conditioning and electric cars charging at home etc this time is likely to reduce even further.
Same in Mauritius. The government has funded hot water heating systems on all houses thanks to solar panels
Proud to be bhartiya ❤❤...
Here I would like to see same clip but for the states in the US.
How is sun state Florida doing?
十分感谢这个频道!能让我真实得感受到世界的变化!❤❤❤
Question, is this new installed capacity, or total generation capacity, if it's the latter, why is there a decrease happening? Does it mean the UK government removed solar?
X2
i could be wrong but i think the uk turned its focus toward wind generation...
the uk gets significantly more wind than sunshine...
UK overtook Australia and India in 2015 haha.
@@TC-V8you are still in 2015
China never disappoints me
Thanks..I've enjoying to watch of all your Graphs of all countries dominations in many different aspects...newly subscriber..👍
If they cover the Sonoran and Chihuahua deserts on the Mexican side and the Baja California desert, Mexico will have a production of 250,000 GWh
China model and development is an example the world should learn and follow
Largest polluter
Dllm@@riderchallenge4250
China is gud at top and impressive but india growth is phenomenal after 2014....
Ok smellie rajeesh
Lol😢😢😢😢
India was growing rapidly before 2014
🇮🇳 always top
It's china
China is racing like there is no tummorrow❤❤
China is racing? 😂😂Little Germany is so much better than China
@@marcsteppi2192 lol.. How can natzi Germany with no gas and deindustrialisation process is so much better than China with largest GDP(PPP) in the world and still growing? You natzis love to live in delusional Alice in natzi wonderland🤣🤣🤣
@@marcsteppi2192Can we buy solar panels made in Germany? Can we buy solar panels made in China?
@@cedriclynch of course, both is possible
We need 100 times more!
The chinese solar energy enterprises are the Best. They were growing very fast que 😮😮
Dust air damaged our development
@@jackytang3683你在哪呢?怎么影响你啦?
India will be among the top 2 within the next couple of years.
PM Modi has recently launched PMSURYA Mission, which will transform India's solar energy landscape
Kudos to the Chinese for accelerating solar and ev adoption. They talk less and do more.
Take any such list, china will always be there on the list somewhere down and as time progresses, china slowly goes up and there pops India in the bottom of the list. Then the two countries start taking leaps where china reaches top and India will be at 2nd or 3rd at the end of the show.
We can do it!!!
العالم العربي و المسلمين في سُبات عميق
It is amazing how a so-called third-world country (India) is always in the top 5 when it comes to amazing things. India is a superpower and always has been.
True 😄
1.4 billions monkeys.
In the next five years Brazil will be top 3. Insane.
Same in Wind power.
VAIII BRASILLLL !!!!!!
Yes, Ventobras...
Installed capacity is not the same as actual power generated every day. Also because it fluctuates too much, and energy storage solutions are still not where they need to be, we can't rely on the solar capacity 24x7 yet.
It is a sh1te system; inconsistent, expensive, requires mass land, high maintenance.
It can be used on existing surface batteries and solar are ideal distributed energy solutions. Providing redundancy for grid failures. Coal gas and oil are also land hungry and far more destructive.
@johncraig4820 "it can be used on existing surface batteries" what do you mean by this?
High maintenance ? What maintenance ? Wiping off a panel?
Yes, You go on your vehicle and start driving around, clean them up. dont forget sand storm will wreck havoc around, also bush fire dust. The soil also creates problem with moisture and vegetation. I have been to a solar farm producing 25MW.
Chinese music so peaceful and ecopro!
谢谢您!
Thanks for the great vids,keep them up
This video confuses installed power with produced energy. In Germany that is the installed power +60Gw for example, while now, just as I write, the production slightly exceeds 30Gwh, we are in the summer and the production is well above the average considering the winter months, above all considering that the peak of + 60Gwh which is the maximum according to the installed power is almost never reached (only with true haze and an unprecedented, zero clouds).
This is very false.
One watt installed generates less than one Kwh per year in Germany. 60 GW installed means less than 60,000 Gwh generated per year.
Bitte nicht mit Fakten verwirren
The UK has solar panels? As an Australian I was told Britain was always cold, cloudy and bleak. 😂
@@ILoveMonorails96 Actually winter is my favourite time of year here (Gold Coast, Queensland). Today we had similar temps to London (min 15-Max 24). I wouldn't like a British winter though, and constant 35C temps with high humidity like our summers aren't fun except for tourists.
@@ILoveMonorails96 As you'd expect, Australia climates vary greatly. We currently have snow down on the Snowy Mountains. Right now it's 3C in Thredbo and 23 in Cairns at 8am. I'm a paramedic and years ago we had a recruitment drive in the IK trying to entice British paramedics to the "Land of sunshine and sand". A couple got posted out west in summer which meant they went from a London winter to constant 45C days week after week with not a drop of rain for months. Northern NSW coast has the best weather, I think. Warm and not too humid, and mild in winter. Melbourne has 4 seasons in one day, the tropics a wet monsoonal summer with the odd cyclone and the outback is just freezing in winter and like an oven in summer.
India and african countries ,south american countries will definitely crosses it in coming future
India and the US are like Elephant...slow to move but once start they reach the top spots in a short time.
Солнечная энергетика это просто модный тренд. Если посчитать, сколько вы тратите энергии, чтобы получить новую энергию и сохранить природу, то атомная энергетика намного лучше солнечной и ветряной.
Thanks to the low prices of solar modules and heavy investment by private companies, India is doing pretty good in solar energy after 2010s
Fun fact, North Africa is rich in Solar power, but we won't use it to generate solar for wealthy Europe, because that entails Europe actually beneficiating North Africa and surrounding states.
Cumulative or per year?
China: who else?
India
@uditbasumatary7145 india too weak
@@changjuma6302 any proof
@@changjuma6302 look your real-estate then take india's name🤣🤣🤣
@@changjuma6302 paxtani
चीन ने हर फील्ड मे दुनिया से बहुत आगे है🙂
Scammer lamguage
@@indiancowpeedrinker9241Well it's script of the oldest language in the world
Sanskrit>>>>>>>>>
Très en avance sur les droits de l'homme...
On rigole (jaune) avec vous 😂
@@indiancowpeedrinker9241 Sahi Al Bukhari 5686 says Camel Urine is a medicine. Some people in Medina were not feeling well, so the Prophet (ﷺ) ordered them to follow his shepherd, i.e. his camels, and drink their urine (as a medicine)
@@joelproust8987les droits de l'homme cette terme est une violation directe des droits de femme
India will be no.1 soon
In the min 90s no country on the list had more than 500 GWh. In the en none had less than 15,900 GWh.
This is a cool racing chart but many countries are already moving away from solar and wind given their high cost, environmental damage and failure to meet power demands.
It would take 450 times as many solar farms to equal the power output of just one Nuclear power plant.
Nuclear plants by far surpass any other renewable source for efficiency, length of service and cost.
Why there is no Gulf countries?
They have more area and Sunshine hours
they have an alternative commodity they are kinda keen on selling...
They are not smart. Arabs can't even make a pencil.
nice, but per inhabitant or in percentage of the total is more relevant. Australia and the Netherlands would then be at the top.
But is you would do it per land mass available, the Netherland would be on top and Australia way down. For a tiny little country the netherlands is doing real good
@@Rob-yj9ewbut to be fair you would also need to see the GDP, obviously countries with a higher GDP can invest more in this
India surprised me
Australia is incredible, so much Solar for such a small population.
Big land.
Huge area
Probably the most sunny days too.
As other people mentioned big land so cheaper land outside cities. But also government rebates for home owners to install solar panels on their roof. Used to be $1850 rebate, now down to $1400 rebate
Under our previous government Australia rose from 8th in the world in 2013 to clear 1st place 2022 on a per capita basis.
Brasil 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Huge country Brasil is NOT in this list! Shame about Brasil
@@marcsteppi2192 It is from 7:16 and it climbs significantly.
Most of the Brazilian energy matrix is based on renewable hydropower. Just recently solar dropped cost enough to be competitive, so Brasil is rapidly investing in it more.
@@marcsteppi2192seu cu
great performance by India
When the Chinese music is on you know......
Jai modi ji❤
It's like after 2014 Bharat realise It's potential
India got entry before 2014
@@humpydumpy2432 but got agility after 2014, the video clearly shows
@@KingPorusWhoDefeatedAlexander India got 7 rank in 2007. All thanks to congress for promoting solar energy and build up infrastructure
@@humpydumpy2432 isiliye ek kahaawat hai "when all your opposition gets united then the ruling king is actually honest & powerful."
India took 65 years to reach 1 trillion economy but only 7 years to reach 2 trillion, 2 years to 3 trillion & only 4 years 2027 to 5 trillion.... all thanks to nda government
Well done .. all the countries. Special credits to Brazil and France whose primary source of energy is not even solar and still low carbon....Brazil with Hydro and France with Nuclear.
OK so can anyone explain what happened to the UK with around 4OGB installed capacity in 1987 and then drops out of the chart completely (from position 2) - did it scrap them? It then reappears suddenly in 2012 with 500GB+🤷♂️
India❤🇮🇳🇮🇳
Scammer
Brasil subindo várias posições. Em 2023 deve passar a Espanha e encostar na Austrália.
Provavelmente, está tendo muito investimento ultimamente, porém nossa maior matriz continua sendo hidrelétrica.
@@alexandref5100 Sim, mas cada ano elas perdem mais participação na nossa matriz pois paramos de construir novas hidreletricas. Já faz uns 4 anos que a capacidade instalada não passa de 109.000 MW.
@@alexandref5100a 12 anos atrás as hidreletricas geravam mais de 90% de nossa eletricidade. Hj geram pouco mais de 60% e continuam em queda livre, até 2030 deve cair para uns 40% ou até menos que isso.
@@edneydenis7856 Na verdade elas nem estão em queda livre, as outras fontes energéticas que estão crescendo muito, na crise hídrica de 2021 alem de importar energia de outros países o Brasil teve que recorrer as eólicas do nordeste, que estão bem em alta ultimamente, em breve vão exportar para a Europa.
O Brasil cresceu nos últimos dois anos por iniciativa dos governos estaduais, MUITO principalmente os do Nordeste. Agora, o governo federal atual passou a atuar/investir e o Brasil certamente crescerá absurdamente tanto em solar como em éolica e hidrogênio verde.
Good collection
Brasil tá crescendo muito
Brasilll 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Power of modi❤
Este ranking está desatualizado!!
Portugal é um dos países que mais utiliza energia solar, não aparece na lista!!
Where get you the Information dir That ?