Il solare ha fatto risparmiare all’Europa 3 miliardi di euro nelle importazioni di combustibili fossili a marzo: quale paese è in testa?

https://www.euronews.com/2026/04/01/solar-saved-europe-3bn-in-fossil-fuel-imports-in-march-which-country-is-leading-the-way

di NumerousTax8165

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8 commenti

  1. 9Divines on

    solar is great but theres already too much solar and not enough wind, in middle of the day electricity is already negative price

  2. GravyVortex on

    Germany and Spain are probably leading, but the Netherlands is wild for rooftop solar too. Would be cool if more countries copied their super-simple permitting for small installations.

  3. Over-Willingness-933 on

    The UK and Germany have the highest energy prices in the World. Renewables even with the current Gulf crisis is.mote expensive. Renewables are good for small villages in remote areas, but cannot power London or Manchester adequately without being very expensive.

  4. GT7combat on

    i have solar panels (no battery) since 2023, great investment since i heat my house with diesel.

    from spring till october i can use electric heaters instead.

  5. shaun2312 on

    As I have said for years, the motorways should have them above, it will help keep the tarmac cooler, and create energy at the same tim

  6. For those that hate these clickbait titles and want to know the answer of the article:

    > In 2024, Austria led the way as the country with the highest green electricity use rate (90 per cent) – spearheaded by its 16 hydroelectric power plants.

    > Sweden came a close second at 88 per cent, powered mainly by wind and water, while Denmark was ranked third with 80 per cent of its energy coming from renewable sources.

    > This was followed by Georgia (68.4 per cent), Portugal (65.8 per cent), Spain (69.7 per cent) and Croatia (58 per cent). Malta was ranked last, with just 10.7 per cent of renewable energy use.

  7. >To put that into perspective, a power plant with a capacity of 1 GW could power approximately 876,000 households for one year, if they consume the average of 10,000 kWh of electricity per year.

    Is this right? Something about the math doesn’t seem to add up but I’ve always been bad with kWh conversions.

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