During the third quarter of 2024, renewable energy sources accounted for 50.5% of electricity generation in Britain.
Electricity statistics from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) show that fossil fuel production in the third quarter was 29% lower than in the third quarter of 2023, accounting for 17.9 TWh.
This is the fourth consecutive quarter that renewables have made up more than half of UK generation.
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Although solar hours this year were the same as in the third quarter of last year, a 10% increase in solar PV capacity led to a 9.2% increase in solar energy generation.
Renewable electricity generation reached 32.2 TWh in the third quarter of 2024, up 6.5% on 2023. DESNZ also states that 2.7 GW of renewable capacity was added in the past year: 1.6 MW of solar PV , 0.4 GW wind at sea and 0.6 GW wind on land. Three-quarters of this, the ministry says, took place in the most recent quarter (which runs from July to September, which coincided with the new government taking office).
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Britain has achieved two records for maximum wind generation in a week, according to data from the National Energy System Operator (NESO).
By 6:30 PM on December 15, 22,243 MW of wind power was in operation to set a maximum wind record for Great Britain, beating the previous record of 21,998 MW set on January 10, 2023. Then at 3:30 am on December 18, 22,523 MW of wind power was in use, setting a new record.
There was a 4.5% decline in offshore wind energy generation, which DESNZ attributes to lower wind speeds. It is also stated that the increase in onshore wind energy generation could be due to a higher level of new capacity.
UK solar capacity is increasing
Figures from DESNZ recently showed that Britain will have a total of 17.2 GW of solar generation capacity at the end of October 2024, an increase of 1 GW or 6.3% since October 2023.
In October 2024, 76 MW of capacity was added across 20,102 new solar installations. Of this, 73% were residential, which amounts to 58 MW of the added installed capacity. This broadly reflects a trend evident in the UK solar sector, where the majority of solar installations are domestic. However, domestic installations only make up around 30% of total UK capacity, with around 5.2GW of solar energy coming from residential roofs.
This article originally appeared on our sister site, Current±.