Hydroelectricity Hydroelectric power is the main mode of electricity production. Norway is known for its particular expertise in the development of efficient, environment-friendly hydroelectric power plants. Calls to power Norway principally through hydropower emerged as early as 1892, coming in the form a letter by the former Prime Minister Gunnar Knutsen to parliament. Ninety percent of hydropower capacity is publicly owned and distributed across municipalities and counties. Nationwide installed capacity of hydropower amounted to 33.8 GW in 2015. The maximum working volume of hydrologic storage power plants is 85 TWh, whereas the average seasonal cycle is 42 terawatt-hours (TWh). In 2015, hydroelectricity generated 144 TWh and accounted for 95.8% of the national electricity demand. In European markets, it is the single largest producer of hydropower. According to the IEA, Norway generated 4.3 percent of the worldwide hydropower in 2008 and ranked 6th for that year, behind
China,
Canada,
Brazil, the
United States and
Russia. Part of the reason that so much of Norway’s electricity can be generated from hydropower is due to the natural advantage of its topography, with abundant steep valleys and rivers. Due to climate change, the region is currently experiencing heavier rainfall and is projected to receive more in the future, further increasing its capacity for hydropower.
Wind power Wind power capacity was at the end of 2019 2444 MW producing 5.5 TWh, an increase of about 780 MW (2.5 TWh) in 2019. In 2021, 64 wind farms had total installed wind power capacity of 4,649 MW with 706 MW of onshore power being added in 2021. Electricity produced in 2021 being 11.8 TWh or 8.5% of Norway's needs.
Solar power Solar PV capacity in Norway reached 616 MW in 2023, up from just 11 MW in 2013. Effective 2024, a 2023 law passed by parliament requires solar power on new government buildings. The same law sets a target of 8 terawatt hours (TWh) of solar electricity generation by 2030, which equates to 5% of total 2022-2023 generation levels. For comparison, solar power produced 0.1% of Norway's electricity generation in 2023. Solar companies include Elkem Solar and NorSun.
Renewable Energy Corporation REC was a
solar power company with headquarters in
Norway and
Singapore. Elkem Solar was part of Norwegian Elkem.
Orkla Group sold it with $2 billion in January 2011 to a Chinese chemical company
China National Bluestar head office in Beijing. NorSun is a private solar cell producer.
Coal power On the island of Svalbard about 0.108 TWh of electricity and heat is produced annually, in two coal fired power plants. The coal is mined on the island, where the surplus of coal (2/3 of production) is exported.
Other types Norway has around 3 power plants burning natural gas, depending on how they are counted:
Mongstad 280 MW
CHP,
Kårstø 420 MW (now closed), and
Tjeldbergodden 150 MW (unused). They are rarely used, as hydropower is usually cheaper. Statkraft experiments with
osmosis at
Tofte. ==Export/Import==