Finland : Electricity Sector Statistics

Finland : Electricity Sector Statistics

Indicator NameValue
Electricity production (kWh)73,546,000,000
Electricity production from coal sources (kWh)10,687,000,000
Electricity production from natural gas sources (kWh)9,660,000,000
Electricity production from nuclear sources (kWh)23,187,000,000
Electricity production from renewable sources (kWh)23,337,000,000
Electricity production from hydroelectric sources (kWh)12,478,000,000
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (kWh)10,859,000,000
Electricity production from oil sources (kWh)474,000,000
Formulas Electricity production = Electricity production from coal sources + Electricity production from natural gas sources + Electricity production from nuclear sources + Electricity production from renewable sources + Electricity production from oil sources

Electricity production from renewable sources = Electricity production from hydroelectric sources + Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric

YearElectric power consumption (kWh)
199062,259,000,000
199162,525,000,000
199263,096,000,000
199365,928,000,000
199469,218,000,000
199569,422,000,000
199670,319,000,000
199774,296,000,000
199876,511,000,000
199977,874,000,000
200079,216,000,000
200181,500,000,000
200283,928,000,000
200385,717,000,000
200487,702,000,000
200584,546,000,000
200690,648,000,000
200790,761,000,000
200886,873,000,000
200981,373,000,000
201088,403,000,000
YearElectric power consumption (kWh per capita)
199012,486
199112,471
199212,514
199313,013
199413,603
199513,591
199613,722
199714,455
199814,846
199915,076
200015,304
200115,709
200216,138
200316,443
200416,775
200516,116
200617,213
200717,161
200816,350
200915,242
201016,483
Electricity production (kWh)Electricity production is measured at the terminals of all alternator sets in a station. In addition to hydropower, coal, oil, gas, and nuclear power generation, it covers generation by geothermal, solar, wind, and tide and wave energy, as well as that from combustible renewables and waste. Production includes the output of electricity plants that are designed to produce electricity only as well as that of combined heat and power plants.
Electricity production from coal sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Coal refers to all coal and brown coal, both primary (including hard coal and lignite-brown coal) and derived fuels (including patent fuel, coke oven coke, gas coke, coke oven gas, and blast furnace gas). Peat is also included in this category.
Electricity production from natural gas sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Gas refers to natural gas but excludes natural gas liquids.
Electricity production from nuclear sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Nuclear power refers to electricity produced by nuclear power plants.
Electricity production from renewable sources (kWh)Electricity production from renewable sources includes hydropower, geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels.
Electricity production from oil sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Oil refers to crude oil and petroleum products.
Electricity production from hydroelectric sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Hydropower refers to electricity produced by hydroelectric power plants.
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (kWh)Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric, includes geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels.
Electric power consumption (kWh)Electric power consumption measures the production of power plants and combined heat and power plants less transmission, distribution, and transformation losses and own use by heat and power plants.
Electric power consumption (kWh per capita)Electric power consumption measures the production of power plants and combined heat and power plants less transmission, distribution, and transformation losses and own use by heat and power plants.
Data Source: Worldbank, World Development Indicators