Oil consumption peaked at over 300,000 tonnes in 2020, of which 30% was for fishing vessels. In 2014 217,547 tonnes of oil products were consumed in the Faroe Islands. Of this 31.58% was consumed by fishing vessels, 14.73% was used by
SEV for electricity production, 23.23% was consumed in air, sea or land transport, 9.6% was used in the industry, and the rest was used in public or private buildings. 4 diesel plants and several wind power plants with a
capacity factor above 40%. In 2014, a 12MW
wind farm for DKK 180 million became operational in 2016. Planners also consider converting the existing
hydropower to
pumped-storage hydroelectricity. and
Thermal energy storage solutions are also considered. The islands have a goal of 100% green electricity production by 2030. In 2014 and 2017 50.8% of the electricity production of SEV in the Faroe Islands came from green energy like hydro and wind, while 49.2% was produced by the
thermal power plants, which was 12.4% less than in 2013. •
fossil fuel: 49.2% •
hydro: 39.5% •
wind: 11.3% (2014) •
nuclear: 0% Total annual production: 305.4 GWh (2014) of which the production of thermal, hydropower and
wind power was: • Thermal: 150,2 GWh • Hydropower: 120,7 GWh • Wind: 34,5 GWh The Faroe Islands have no electricity connections to other areas, and thus operate in
island condition. Some islands are also not connected to the other islands, and must maintain their own electric system. == Other ==