Energy in Portugal

Portugal electricity production 1980-2019

Energy in Portugal describes energy and electricity production, consumption and import in Portugal. Energy policy of Portugal will describe the politics of Portugal related to energy more in detail. Electricity sector in Portugal is the main article of electricity in Portugal.

In 2000, 85% of energy was imported. In 2021 the last coal fired power station closed and renewable energy was expanded to fill the gap. In 2023 Portugal was responsible for around 1% of the total global greenhouse gas emissions. Portugal has committed to carbon neutrality and net zero by 2050.[1]

Energy statistics

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2020 energy statistics[2]
Production capacities for electricity
(billion kWh)
Type Amount
Fossil fuel 76.40
Hydro 51.92
Wind power 45.65
Biomass 15.08
Solar 6.27
Geothermal 0.78
Total 196.10
     
Electricity
(billion kWh)
Category Amount
Consumption 48.41
Production 52.22
Import 7.55
Export 6.10
     
Natural Gas
(billion m3)
Consumption 5.94
Import 6.09
     
Crude Oil
(barrels per day)
Consumption 90,920,000
Production 2,920,000
Import 93,220,000

CO2 emissions:
38.97 million tons

Energy plans

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Portugal aims to be climate neutral by 2050 and to cover 80% of its electricity consumption with renewables by 2030.[3] Portugal has also developed a hydrogen strategy to decrease natural gas imports and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.

Greenhouse gas emissions

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In 2023 Portugal emitted around 339 million tonnes of greenhouse gases (about 5 tonnes per person), equivalent to around 1% of global total emissions.[4] As a EU member state, Portugal is part of their joint plan to reduce emissions by a minimum of 55% by 2030, compared to the level of emissions in 1990. Portugal has committed to carbon neutrality and net zero by 2050.[5] As of 2023, oil made up 44% of Portugal's total energy supply. However the country phased out coal-fired generation in 2021 and has been developing renewable energies such as hydopower and wind power[6] and investing in public transport and electric vehicles.[7][8]

Energy sources

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Fossil fuels

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Coal

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Sines power plant (hard coal) started operation in 1985–1989 in Portugal. According to WWF its CO2 emissions were among the top dirty ones in Portugal in 2007.[9] That coal power plant went offline in January 2021, with the one remaining coal power plant in the country, closing at 7h15 on the 19th of November 2021.[10] [11]

Natural gas

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Maghreb–Europe Gas Pipeline (MEG) is a natural gas pipeline, from Algeria through Morocco to Andalusia, Spain.

Portugal has the Sines LNG import terminal to facilitate gas imports. There are three LNG storage tanks with a total capacity of 390,000 cbm and a regasification capacity of 5.6 mtpa.[12] In 2021 Portugal imported 2.8 billion cubic meters of LNG from Nigeria, being almost 50% of the country's gas imports for the year.[13]

Renewable energy

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Portugal's renewable electricity production from 1980 until 2019
Years in which the last three renewable power levels achieved
Achievement Year Achievement Year Achievement Year
20% 2006 25% 2010 30% 2020[2]

Renewable energy includes wind, solar, biomass and geothermal energy sources.

Energy from renewable sources has been increasing in Portugal since 2000 and has been given a boost with the 2030 renewable energy target.

Solar power

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Portugal has supported and increased the solar electricity (Photovoltaic power) and solar thermal energy (solar heating) during 2006–2010. Portugal was 9th in solar heating in the EU and 8th in solar power based on total volume in 2010.

The largest solar farm in Europe is being built in Santiago do Cacém near Sines, creating up to 2,500 jobs, mostly local, it will be completed in 2025 and have a generating capacity of 1.2 GW.[14]

Wind power

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Wind energy capacity in Portugal is over 5,000 MW from onshore wind farms. In 2023, plans for the first floating offshore wind farm were announced.[15]

Biomass

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Biomass provides around 8% of electricity generation capacity.

Hydro power

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Portugal has also been using water power to generate power for the country. In the 2010s, a local company, Wave Roller installed many devices along the coast to make use of the water power.[16]

In 2021, 36% of Portugal’s total installed power generation capacity and 23% of total power generation came from hydro power.[17]

Drought can seriously reduce hydro energy generation in the summer months.

Nuclear power

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Portugal does not produce any electricity from nuclear sources.[18]

Transport

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The sustainable strategy has been a shift from individual to collective transport within the Lisbon Metropolitan Area (Metro Lisbon (ML), collective buses, Companhia Carris de ferro de Lisboa).

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Portugal Climate Change Data | Emissions and Policies". www.climatewatchdata.org. Retrieved 2025-03-11.
  2. ^ a b "Energy consumption in Portugal". 2020.
  3. ^ "Photovoltaikmarkt in Portugal wächst rasant". Erneuerbare Energien. 26 July 2019. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
  4. ^ Jones, Matthew W.; Peters, Glen P.; Gasser, Thomas; Andrew, Robbie M.; Schwingshackl, Clemens; Gütschow, Johannes; Houghton, Richard A.; Friedlingstein, Pierre; Pongratz, Julia (2024-11-13), National contributions to climate change due to historical emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, Zenodo, doi:10.5281/zenodo.14054503, retrieved 2025-03-11
  5. ^ "Portugal Climate Change Data | Emissions and Policies". www.climatewatchdata.org. Retrieved 2025-03-11.
  6. ^ "Portugal - Countries & Regions". IEA. Retrieved 2025-03-11.
  7. ^ "Portugal's recovery and resilience plan - European Commission". commission.europa.eu. Retrieved 2025-03-11.
  8. ^ "Portugal's National Energy and Climate Plan for 2021-2030 - Climate Change Laws of the World". climate-laws.org. 2019. Retrieved 2025-03-11.
  9. ^ Dirty Thirty WWF 2007
  10. ^ "EDP shutters Sines power plant in Portugal, country to be coal-free by November". Institute for Energy Economics & Financial Analysis. 2021-01-15. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  11. ^ "Acabou a produção de eletricidade a partir do carvão em Portugal". Expresso (in European Portuguese). 2021-11-20. Retrieved 2021-11-21.
  12. ^ "Portugal's Sines LNG import terminal hits delivery record in 2022". 16 January 2023.
  13. ^ "Portugal says could face shortage if Nigeria does not deliver all LNG due". 19 September 2022.
  14. ^ "Europe's largest solar power project is underway in Portugal". 6 February 2023.
  15. ^ "IberBlue Wind announces the first project in Portugal for floating offshore wind farm of 990 MW". 17 February 2023.
  16. ^ "Portugal takes a step closer to commercial wave energy – AW-Energy Oy".
  17. ^ "Hydropower capacity in Portugal and major projects". 20 June 2023.
  18. ^ "IAEA Mission Says Portugal Committed to the Safe Management of Radioactive Waste, Sees Areas for Improvement". 26 May 2023.