
Renewable Energy Now Has
40% Market Penetration of Electricity In Scotland Renewable energy use is at a
record high in Scotland, according to new government figures.
In
2012, Scotland got 40.3 percent of its
electricity from renewable sources — up from 36.3 percent in 2011 and just 24.1
percent in 2010. The Scottish government plans to get half of its electricity
from renewable energy by 2015 — a target it said it was on track to meet — and
100 percent of its electricity by 2020. Scotland’s renewable energy numbers are
much higher than many other U.K. countries — renewables produced only 8.2 percent
of England’s electricity in 2012, and in Wales, 8.7 percent of electricity
comes from renewable sources.
“Renewable
electricity in Scotland is going from strength to strength, confirming that
2012 was a record year for generation in Scotland and that 2013 looks set to be
even better,” said Scotland’s energy minister Fergus Ewing.’Lang
Banks, Director of WWF Scotland, told the BBC that if Scotland is to meet its
target of renewable energy generating 100 percent of electricity by 2020, the
country will need to invest more in offshore wind.
“In
order to remain on target Scotland will need to deploy significant amounts of
offshore wind in the near future,” he said. “It’s therefore vital that the U.K.
government gives a stronger signal of its ambition on the growth of offshore
wind in Scotland’s seas, as well as the necessary support needed to deliver
that growth.” Wind
power is Scotland’s fastest-growing renewable energy source — in In 2012,
Scotland’s wind power generation jumped by 19 percent. The country is
home to the U.K.’s largest wind farm and
constructed its first offshore wind farm in April 2010. The country is also
working to harness tidal power and is home to world’s first commercial wave power generator.
Read more at Cleantechnica
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