As a member of the European Union, Slovenia was required to prepare and submit a national energy and climate plan (NECP). [18] Slovenia submitted their Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan of the Republic of Slovenia in February 2020.
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The aim of this package of measures is to make Europe the world''s first climate-neutral continent by 2050. How will the Green Deal impact the energy sector and its future development? The
Slovenia: Many of us want an overview of how much energy our country consumes, where it comes from, and if we''re making progress on decarbonizing our energy mix. This page provides the data for your chosen country across
Following steep declines in use since 1990, Slovenia eliminated the use of oil for generating electricity in 2019. Renewable energy sources other than hydropower (e.g., biofuels, solar PV, waste, and wind) together provided 3.5% of total electricity generation in 2019.
Electricity consumption per capita exceeds 6 600 kWh (20% above the EU average). Slovenia's energy intensity has decreased at the same rate as the EU average (-1.9%/year over 2000-2019) and remained 25% higher in 2019. Benefit from up to 2 000 up-to-date data series for 186 countries in Global Energy & CO 2 data
Total primary energy supply (TPES) in Slovenia was 6.80 Mtoe in 2019. In the same year, electricity production was 16.1 TWh, consumption was 14.9 TWh. The transportation and industrial sectors were the largest consumers of energy in Slovenia in 2019.
Slovenia has already achieved the electricity interconnection level aimed of at least 15%. Besides information on the new electricity and gas infrastructure projects, the draft plan contains limited information on general market functioning and does not yet include any specific objectives and targets relating to the internal market dimension.
Under the EU Climate and Energy package, Slovenia was expected to raise the share of renewables in final consumption to 25% in 2020, of which 39% for electricity, 30.8% for heating and cooling, and 10.5% for transport.
Slovenia had just 2 wind turbines in 2022. Onshore wind energy potential for Slovenia is typical of central and eastern Europe. A northwest to southeast band of higher potential wind energy is found across far southwest Slovenia, roughly between Gorizia, Italy and Rijeka, Croatia.
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