We've still got a ways to go: renewable energy only accounts for a total of 2.5 % of
total electrical capacity, with 105 million MWh of total net generation.
Not exact matches
A typical hurricane releases some 600 trillion watts of heat energy, equivalent to 200 times the world's
total electrical generating
capacity.
12 We're going to need a bigger windmill: A typical hurricane releases some 600 trillion watts of heat energy, equivalent to 200 times the world's
total electrical generating
capacity.
According to a landmark plan, India aims to install 275 GW of renewable energy by 2027 — as a point of reference,
total installed
electrical capacity in 2016 hovered around the 300 GW mark, 70 percent being derived from coal gas and diesel.
The Partnership's average annual SF6 emission rate, the ratio of SF6 emissions relative to
total SF6 nameplate
capacity (i.e., the
total quantity of SF6 contained in
electrical equipment), is a benchmark metric by which achievements of the Partnership are tracked.
MEFJ2 is the quotient of the
capacity of the clothes container, C, divided by the
total clothes washer energy consumption per cycle, with such energy consumption expressed as the sum of the machine
electrical energy consumption, M, the hot water energy consumption, E, and the energy required for removal of the remaining moisture in the wash load, D.
IMEF is the quotient of the
capacity of the clothes container, C, divided by the
total clothes washer energy consumption per cycle, with such energy consumption expressed as the sum of the machine
electrical energy consumption, M, the hot water energy consumption, E, the energy required for removal of the remaining moisture in the wash load, D and the combined low - power mode energy consumption, L.
The biggest market segment for
electrical storage remains the utility - scale battery storage market (i.e. front - of - meter), accounting for 60 % of
total capacities installed in 2015 and still commanding 55 % of the overall stationary battery market in 2017.
This disparity between the placement,
capacity, and
total potential energy of the two different grounding locations causes, in a manner of speaking, congestion in the
electrical system.