It’s unlikely to be correct. For example, Iceland as a country which produces almost all of its electricity consumption from geothermal sources is absent. I believe, they might unintentionally used unreliable and biased datasets.
It probably based on reports from power companies and only measures the energy they produce and put onto the grid. Stand along generators probably dont get measured and reported often, if at all. I don't know how things run in Iceland but if there is a lot of that going on it wouldn't count towards statistics
@@matthewsorenson46 Iceland produces all it's electrical power from renewables and gets 85 % of it's primary energy from renewables. About 60 % of Iceland's energy comes from geothermal and about 25 % from hydropower, the rest 15 % are from fossil fuels.
@mjoelnir1899 I'm aware of where their power comes from, more or less, but the entity collecting the power may not report numbers based on how things work within the government/power companies
@@matthewsorenson46 A very short search on the internet will provide you the data. You try to excuse somebody or several somebodies for sloppy work. Start out with Wikipedia.org and follow the references there.
And it's not even correct. Brazil has ended 2023, for example, with a total of 93,1% of renewable sources making up it's annual energy production, so ...
Securities Times reported that according to the National Energy Administration website, the National Energy Administration held a press conference on the morning of October 30. Wang Dapeng, deputy director of the Department of New and Renewable Energy, said that in the first three quarters of 2023, the country’s renewable energy power generation will reach 2.07 trillion kilowatt hours, accounting for approximately 31.3% of the total power generation; of which, wind power and photovoltaic power generation reached 1.07 trillion kilowatt hours, a year-on-year increase of 22.3%, exceeding the domestic electricity consumption of urban and rural residents in the same period.
@@Ilovecruise The chart is not about electricity, it is primary energy. So all the energey a nation uses in any way, fuel for cars, burning coals for electricity, heating and so on...
I don’t see Iceland? Also numbers aren’t correct, since renewables for a country like Denmark can some years be 50% from wind alone and other years less. The volatile nature of this isn’t depictes in this graph
@@alessandrobernardi9347 Our World In Data is reliable. Energy Institute I’ve never heard of. The numbers make sense though. So even if they are wrong, they can’t be far off.
We Brazilians have all the right to use our rainforest resources, since we do not contribute significantly to climate change. Learn about Kuznets' curve and appreciate the economical dynamic. Amazon is not untouchable!
That depends if you are happy to destroy huge areas of natural habitat endangering vast numbers of animal and plant species. Not to mention thr indigenous population. So, no, you don't have the right to destroy the amazon forest.
It’s unlikely to be correct. For example, Iceland as a country which produces almost all of its electricity consumption from geothermal sources is absent. I believe, they might unintentionally used unreliable and biased datasets.
It probably based on reports from power companies and only measures the energy they produce and put onto the grid. Stand along generators probably dont get measured and reported often, if at all. I don't know how things run in Iceland but if there is a lot of that going on it wouldn't count towards statistics
@@matthewsorenson46 Iceland produces all it's electrical power from renewables and gets 85 % of it's primary energy from renewables.
About 60 % of Iceland's energy comes from geothermal and about 25 % from hydropower, the rest 15 % are from fossil fuels.
@mjoelnir1899 I'm aware of where their power comes from, more or less, but the entity collecting the power may not report numbers based on how things work within the government/power companies
@@matthewsorenson46 A very short search on the internet will provide you the data. You try to excuse somebody or several somebodies for sloppy work. Start out with Wikipedia.org and follow the references there.
And what about oil/petrol for transport? The probably use a lot more that other countries I guess.
Brazil in 3°place, good! 🇧🇷💪🏻😎
And it's not even correct. Brazil has ended 2023, for example, with a total of 93,1% of renewable sources making up it's annual energy production, so ...
@@guilhermehaber1022 no, only in eletric energy not in total energy
@@gegefilho Se fosse em energia total seria melhor ainda. Quem além do Brasil que usa álcool em carros?
Where was the UK? By 2022 we were nailing it with wind power!
😂😂😂😂
WTF is this, Romania had 40% renewable energy this year, mostly hydro...
It's share of total energy produced. Including transportation
You are right, I doesn't make any sense. Check Paraguay or Costa Rica as well.
Paraguay consume 100% su energía de fuentes renovables.
Uruguay también. Los guays siempre siendo los olvidados de latam
O percentual referido no vídeo é o da matriz energética, não da elétrica, são coisas diferentes.
Thank you fir enlightening me.
Paraguay and Uruguay are really good tourist destinations along with good and amazing people.
good on you brazil
It's funny how we don't see any of those countries which criticize how Brazil handles the Amazon on the top 😂
It looks incredible that some Countries, say China or Iceland, are not in this list...
Where is Iceland?
Should be 100% with geothermal energy.
Türkiye is producing at least %30 its energy from renewable resources.
Brasil representando a América 🇧🇷✨
Sim, nem os Estados Unidos apareceu direito kkkkkk 🇧🇷😎💪🏻
Mucha energía renovable y blabla pero luego andan quemando el amazonia a lo loco
Brazilian very good
I don’t think the New Zealand stats are correct. Please google
Securities Times reported that according to the National Energy Administration website, the National Energy Administration held a press conference on the morning of October 30. Wang Dapeng, deputy director of the Department of New and Renewable Energy, said that in the first three quarters of 2023, the country’s renewable energy power generation will reach 2.07 trillion kilowatt hours, accounting for approximately 31.3% of the total power generation; of which, wind power and photovoltaic power generation reached 1.07 trillion kilowatt hours, a year-on-year increase of 22.3%, exceeding the domestic electricity consumption of urban and rural residents in the same period.
China? Produces more hydro electricity than any other five countries in the world combined, is also among g the top producers of solar and wind !
But it consumes vast amounts of coal and oil.
And produce a lot of goods
@@richardsinger01but as of 2023 it’s renewable capacity is already 51% of total electricity capacity
@@Ilovecruise The chart is not about electricity, it is primary energy. So all the energey a nation uses in any way, fuel for cars, burning coals for electricity, heating and so on...
btw isent iceland missing? dont they get all thier energy from renewable volcano heat?
Renewable includes burning and planting trees
Nice video. I understand this contains a lot of kinds of energy (primary energy). A renewable electric energy ranking (%) also would be nice.
You won't see the US or China on this list.
Because nuclear power isnt counted
It's video is not true! Tajikistan🇹🇯 98% from renewable energy
I don’t see Iceland? Also numbers aren’t correct, since renewables for a country like Denmark can some years be 50% from wind alone and other years less. The volatile nature of this isn’t depictes in this graph
Vocês estão sendo desonestos, olha o tamanho do Brasil para a Suécia e Noruega. Somos os primeiros 🇧🇷
We need the most gaz exporter and producing not gas reserved
Costa Rica first place, movie not correct.
Costa rica diesel trucks are not powered by hydroelectric dams
@@mattllaves в Коста Рика большую часть электроэнергии производится ГЭС, возобновляемой энергией
She is European only
Dados falsos, matriz energetica brasileira já passa dos 70% de energias limpas
Aí é matriz elétrica (luz), a matriz energética inclui carros também
Nah this new energy
This seems incorrect, what is the source? Is it not considering nuclear as renewable?
I'm pro nuclear but it's not renewable. Uranium is mined
it's green energy, not renewable
Where is the United States?
good joke hahaha, the USA is the biggest polluter in history and the second biggest today
Who took those data? About italy is different.
Energy Institute and Our World In Data.
@@Zackzickel And is it a reliable source?
@@alessandrobernardi9347 Our World In Data is reliable. Energy Institute I’ve never heard of. The numbers make sense though. So even if they are wrong, they can’t be far off.
Video has so many wrong information.
In 2023 India is on 33%.
In 2024 very near to 37%
Currently very near about 40%
This is energy not just eletric
Where is the PRC?
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Busy shovelling coal.
Spain 🇪🇸💪🏽
We Brazilians have all the right to use our rainforest resources, since we do not contribute significantly to climate change. Learn about Kuznets' curve and appreciate the economical dynamic. Amazon is not untouchable!
That depends if you are happy to destroy huge areas of natural habitat endangering vast numbers of animal and plant species. Not to mention thr indigenous population. So, no, you don't have the right to destroy the amazon forest.
You say this because your country has probably already destroyed all its forests@@richardsinger01