Spain | Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (% of total)
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric, includes geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels. Limitations and exceptions: IEA occasionally revises its time series to reflect political changes. For example, the IEA has constructed historical energy statistics for countries of the former Soviet Union. In addition, energy statistics for other countries have undergone continuous changes in coverage or methodology in recent years as more detailed energy accounts have become available. Breaks in series are therefore unavoidable. Statistical concept and methodology: Electricity production from renewable sources (% of total) is the share of electricity produced by geothermal, solar photovoltaic, solar thermal, tide, wind, industrial waste, municipal waste, primary solid biofuels, biogases, biogasoline, biodiesels, other liquid biofuels, nonspecified primary biofuels and waste, and charcoal in total electricity production which is the total number of GWh generated by power plants separated into electricity plants and CHP plants. Hydropower is excluded. The International Energy Agency (IEA) compiles data on energy inputs used to generate electricity. IEA data for countries that are not members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) are based on national energy data adjusted to conform to annual questionnaires completed by OECD member governments. In addition, estimates are sometimes made to complete major aggregates from which key data are missing, and adjustments are made to compensate for differences in definitions. The IEA makes these estimates in consultation with national statistical offices, oil companies, electric utilities, and national energy experts.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Kingdom of Spain
Records
63
Source
Spain | Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (% of total)
0 1960
0 1961
0 1962
0 1963
0 1964
0 1965
0 1966
0 1967
0 1968
0 1969
0.0834769 1970
0.08443615 1971
0.08981816 1972
0.07401533 1973
0.06368949 1974
0.13764038 1975
0.20953555 1976
0.33337289 1977
0.32150415 1978
0.2397257 1979
0.33142292 1980
0.38546856 1981
0.42905221 1982
0.48536116 1983
0.46568337 1984
0.48639913 1985
0.41956515 1986
0.42456601 1987
0.48562605 1988
0.36752717 1989
0.37167837 1990
0.36446116 1991
0.4377792 1992
0.45291079 1993
0.51211296 1994
0.7826276 1995
0.84157702 1996
1.17263293 1997
1.4985108 1998
2.17890855 1999
2.82363379 2000
3.61012069 2001
4.98422371 2002
5.94606569 2003
6.89891994 2004
8.24681718 2005
8.86048542 2006
10.26176207 2007
12.47001396 2008
16.33232717 2009
18.59479753 2010
19.52677741 2011
22.5952739 2012
26.48510366 2013
25.85934119 2014
24.82000922 2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Spain | Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (% of total)
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric, includes geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels. Limitations and exceptions: IEA occasionally revises its time series to reflect political changes. For example, the IEA has constructed historical energy statistics for countries of the former Soviet Union. In addition, energy statistics for other countries have undergone continuous changes in coverage or methodology in recent years as more detailed energy accounts have become available. Breaks in series are therefore unavoidable. Statistical concept and methodology: Electricity production from renewable sources (% of total) is the share of electricity produced by geothermal, solar photovoltaic, solar thermal, tide, wind, industrial waste, municipal waste, primary solid biofuels, biogases, biogasoline, biodiesels, other liquid biofuels, nonspecified primary biofuels and waste, and charcoal in total electricity production which is the total number of GWh generated by power plants separated into electricity plants and CHP plants. Hydropower is excluded. The International Energy Agency (IEA) compiles data on energy inputs used to generate electricity. IEA data for countries that are not members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) are based on national energy data adjusted to conform to annual questionnaires completed by OECD member governments. In addition, estimates are sometimes made to complete major aggregates from which key data are missing, and adjustments are made to compensate for differences in definitions. The IEA makes these estimates in consultation with national statistical offices, oil companies, electric utilities, and national energy experts.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Kingdom of Spain
Records
63
Source