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14% of global electricity is generated from Hydropower

14.30 % Share of global electricity
24 gCO2eq/kWh Carbon Intensity
Hydropower

Hydroelectric power, commonly referred to as hydro, is a renewable energy source that leverages the natural water cycle and the potential energy stored in water at elevation. By utilizing the flow of water from a height, typically from a dam, this form of energy generates mechanical energy that can be converted into electricity. As one of the most established and widely used forms of sustainable energy, hydroelectric power plays a critical role in reducing our dependence on fossil fuels and mitigating the negative impacts associated with carbon emissions.

The process of generating electricity from hydro involves channeling water through turbines, which are connected to generators. As water flows over the turbines, it causes them to spin, converting the mechanical energy of moving water into electrical energy through the generators. This method is highly efficient, as it continuously harnesses the inexhaustible power of flowing water, usually with minimal evaporation losses compared to the water used. The infrastructure can vary in size, from large dams, like those seen in regions with abundant water resources, to smaller run-of-the-river plants that minimize ecological disruption. Once set up, hydroelectric systems offer a consistent and reliable energy supply.

One of the primary advantages of hydroelectric power is its low carbon intensity, averaging around 24 gCO2eq/kWh. This figure demonstrates that hydro is significantly cleaner compared to fossil fuel sources like coal, which emits 820 gCO2eq/kWh, gas at 490 gCO2eq/kWh, and oil at 650 gCO2eq/kWh. By contrast, other low-carbon energy sources such as wind and nuclear have carbon intensities of 11 gCO2eq/kWh and 12 gCO2eq/kWh, respectively. All these low-carbon options present viable pathways to reducing our carbon footprint and combating climate change.

Hydroelectricity also plays a substantial role in the global energy mix, contributing to about 14% of all electricity consumed worldwide. Its prominence is even more pronounced in certain countries where favorable geographic conditions allow for extensive hydropower exploitation. For example, Bhutan generates 93% of its electricity from hydro, while Norway produces 90%, Iceland 73%, Canada more than half, and Montana around a third. These examples showcase the varied yet significant capacity of hydroelectric power to meet electricity demands in different regions, contributing to energy independence and sustainability.

The potential for further development of low-carbon energy sources, including solar and nuclear, is immense, and they should be considered on par with expanding hydroelectric power. As cities continue their push towards electrification, the need for reliable, clean energy sources is essential. By expanding our use of inflammation-free energy solutions such as nuclear and solar, and maximizing the output from existing hydroelectric plants, we can effectively address the increasing global demand for electricity while safeguarding the environment for future generations.

Country/Region kWh/person % TWh
Iceland 33661.3 W 72.7% 13.5 TWh
Norway 26022.5 W 89.9% 145.5 TWh
Bhutan 14192.5 W 93.1% 11.2 TWh
Canada 8540.0 W 54.6% 341.4 TWh
Montana 8481.8 W 34.2% 9.8 TWh
Greenland 8397.5 W 87.0% 0.5 TWh
Washington 8157.3 W 62.8% 65.2 TWh
Oregon 6825.2 W 42.8% 29.2 TWh
Paraguay 6428.9 W 99.5% 44.0 TWh
Sweden 6371.8 W 40.9% 68.1 TWh
Laos 5218.6 W 76.5% 40.0 TWh
South Dakota 5200.6 W 22.2% 4.9 TWh
Idaho 4750.8 W 32.8% 9.7 TWh
New Zealand 4539.3 W 55.5% 23.9 TWh
Switzerland 4159.2 W 55.8% 37.5 TWh
Austria 3973.4 W 47.5% 36.8 TWh
Albania 3097.9 W 96.7% 8.7 TWh
Georgia 2883.2 W 73.7% 11.0 TWh
North Dakota 2747.9 W 5.2% 2.2 TWh
Alaska 2497.7 W 27.5% 1.8 TWh
Faroe Islands 2407.9 W 27.1% 0.1 TWh
Venezuela 2296.0 W 78.3% 65.0 TWh
Montenegro 2268.7 W 39.0% 1.4 TWh
Finland 2186.1 W 14.4% 12.3 TWh
Tajikistan 2049.0 W 93.0% 22.2 TWh
French Guiana 2011.5 W 61.2% 0.6 TWh
Slovenia 1987.5 W 28.0% 4.3 TWh
Costa Rica 1934.1 W 75.8% 10.0 TWh
New Caledonia 1880.9 W 17.5% 0.5 TWh
Maine 1860.9 W 16.3% 2.6 TWh
Vermont 1852.2 W 19.3% 1.2 TWh
Brazil 1850.1 W 52.5% 394.1 TWh
Portugal 1787.7 W 29.5% 18.7 TWh
Uruguay 1758.4 W 46.2% 6.0 TWh
Wyoming 1681.4 W 2.1% 1.0 TWh
Alabama 1597.1 W 5.8% 8.3 TWh
Latvia 1582.3 W 41.0% 2.9 TWh
Ecuador 1537.4 W 73.1% 28.1 TWh
Croatia 1450.5 W 27.7% 5.6 TWh
Bosnia & Herzegovina 1433.7 W 32.8% 4.4 TWh
Suriname 1431.2 W 42.1% 0.9 TWh
Panama 1379.3 W 47.8% 6.2 TWh
Russia 1340.2 W 16.9% 194.0 TWh
New York 1288.3 W 15.6% 25.3 TWh
Serbia 1287.2 W 23.5% 8.6 TWh
Colombia 1194.8 W 71.4% 64.0 TWh
Luxembourg 1145.4 W 14.2% 0.8 TWh
Tennessee 1072.4 W 6.7% 7.8 TWh
Arkansas 1059.5 W 4.9% 3.3 TWh
People's Republic of China 1025.5 W 13.9% 1460.0 TWh
Chile 970.9 W 21.8% 19.3 TWh
New Hampshire 954.2 W 6.9% 1.4 TWh
France 946.6 W 11.4% 63.2 TWh
Peru 946.6 W 53.4% 32.7 TWh
Malaysia 935.8 W 17.8% 33.6 TWh
Armenia 864.8 W 26.7% 2.5 TWh
Vietnam 858.4 W 33.7% 87.6 TWh
Kyrgyzstan 855.4 W 77.8% 6.2 TWh
Kentucky 846.3 W 4.7% 3.9 TWh
Spain 825.1 W 13.7% 39.7 TWh
Zambia 824.7 W 87.8% 17.1 TWh
United States 784.3 W 5.9% 271.3 TWh
EU 767.0 W 12.9% 346.0 TWh
Argentina 759.9 W 23.3% 34.8 TWh
West Virginia 729.6 W 2.4% 1.3 TWh
North Macedonia 729.4 W 17.4% 1.3 TWh
Réunion 722.9 W 18.7% 0.6 TWh
California 716.3 W 9.5% 28.1 TWh
Italy 714.5 W 13.3% 42.3 TWh
French Polynesia 677.8 W 26.8% 0.2 TWh
Turkey 657.7 W 16.7% 58.1 TWh
Japan 653.7 W 8.3% 80.5 TWh
Arizona 652.7 W 4.1% 5.0 TWh
Fiji 649.3 W 52.2% 0.6 TWh
North Korea 630.5 W 62.5% 16.6 TWh
Slovakia 621.1 W 12.6% 3.4 TWh
Romania 614.3 W 22.3% 11.6 TWh
Gabon 611.7 W 40.3% 1.5 TWh
Belize 583.8 W 32.9% 0.2 TWh
Nebraska 577.7 W 2.8% 1.2 TWh
Nevada 572.0 W 4.0% 1.9 TWh
Kazakhstan 502.9 W 8.5% 10.5 TWh
The World 487.8 W 14.3% 4014.9 TWh
Mozambique 480.7 W 82.7% 16.2 TWh
Australia 458.8 W 4.5% 12.4 TWh
Namibia 445.5 W 28.4% 1.3 TWh
Bulgaria 432.3 W 7.9% 2.9 TWh
North Carolina 415.8 W 3.0% 4.6 TWh
Oklahoma 413.3 W 1.9% 1.7 TWh
South Carolina 398.0 W 2.1% 2.2 TWh
Greece 387.7 W 7.6% 3.9 TWh
Republic of China (Taiwan) 371.7 W 3.0% 8.6 TWh
Wisconsin 366.5 W 2.8% 2.2 TWh
Honduras 364.5 W 32.6% 3.9 TWh
Angola 361.1 W 74.0% 13.3 TWh
Nepal 356.4 W 94.6% 10.6 TWh
Zimbabwe 334.1 W 53.5% 5.5 TWh
Iowa 324.0 W 1.4% 1.1 TWh
Colorado 318.6 W 3.0% 1.9 TWh
Guatemala 311.7 W 40.6% 5.7 TWh
Azerbaijan 305.6 W 12.2% 3.2 TWh
Dominica 300.9 W 13.3% 0.0 TWh
Sri Lanka 300.8 W 36.7% 7.0 TWh
Cambodia 299.9 W 24.7% 5.3 TWh
Lithuania 274.7 W 6.8% 0.8 TWh
Ghana 272.0 W 37.8% 9.2 TWh
Ukraine 270.4 W 9.8% 11.1 TWh
Bolivia 268.5 W 28.5% 3.4 TWh
Equatorial Guinea 265.2 W 31.2% 0.5 TWh
Maryland 251.2 W 2.4% 1.6 TWh
Germany 246.7 W 4.5% 20.9 TWh
Eswatini 243.8 W 20.1% 0.3 TWh
Czechia 241.3 W 3.7% 2.6 TWh
Sudan 229.8 W 65.2% 11.5 TWh
Mexico 222.8 W 7.9% 29.3 TWh
Lesotho 210.0 W 52.7% 0.5 TWh
Guinea 208.3 W 74.1% 3.0 TWh
Ireland 199.4 W 3.0% 1.1 TWh
St. Vincent & Grenadines 197.5 W 13.3% 0.0 TWh
Georgia (US) 189.7 W 1.3% 2.1 TWh
Cameroon 185.4 W 62.7% 5.3 TWh
Utah 185.3 W 1.7% 0.7 TWh
Uzbekistan 185.1 W 8.3% 6.6 TWh
Louisiana 183.3 W 0.8% 0.8 TWh
Missouri 182.5 W 1.3% 1.1 TWh
Myanmar (Burma) 174.8 W 37.7% 9.5 TWh
Congo - Brazzaville 169.8 W 20.3% 1.1 TWh
South Korea 158.0 W 1.4% 8.2 TWh
Pakistan 155.7 W 24.5% 39.9 TWh
Samoa 138.5 W 20.0% 0.0 TWh
Ethiopia 136.9 W 96.5% 17.6 TWh
Dominican Republic 134.1 W 6.5% 1.6 TWh
Pennsylvania 130.9 W 0.7% 1.7 TWh
Congo - Kinshasa 129.2 W 79.0% 13.7 TWh
Egypt 129.2 W 6.7% 15.2 TWh
Minnesota 129.0 W 1.0% 0.7 TWh
Lebanon 121.2 W 15.5% 0.7 TWh
India 120.5 W 8.9% 176.1 TWh
Sub-Saharan Africa 119.7 W 28.6% 147.3 TWh
El Salvador 115.0 W 17.2% 0.7 TWh
Philippines 114.8 W 11.2% 13.4 TWh
Belarus 111.9 W 2.3% 1.0 TWh
Côte d’Ivoire 107.5 W 30.1% 3.4 TWh
Thailand 106.2 W 3.4% 7.6 TWh
Uganda 105.3 W 86.6% 5.0 TWh
Belgium 97.6 W 1.5% 1.2 TWh
Papua New Guinea 96.3 W 21.1% 1.0 TWh
United Kingdom 96.2 W 2.1% 6.7 TWh
Nicaragua 95.3 W 11.8% 0.7 TWh
Connecticut 92.0 W 0.8% 0.3 TWh
Indonesia 87.4 W 7.0% 24.6 TWh
Malawi 82.2 W 92.3% 1.7 TWh
Moldova 81.7 W 5.2% 0.2 TWh
Mauritius 70.7 W 2.8% 0.1 TWh
Mali 69.0 W 35.8% 1.6 TWh
Poland 67.4 W 1.6% 2.6 TWh
Kenya 60.3 W 23.3% 3.5 TWh
Michigan 58.1 W 0.5% 0.6 TWh
Massachusetts 54.3 W 0.6% 0.4 TWh
Indiana 50.6 W 0.3% 0.4 TWh
Nigeria 48.1 W 32.2% 11.4 TWh
São Tomé & Príncipe 44.2 W 11.1% 0.0 TWh
Mauritania 43.1 W 10.4% 0.2 TWh
Jamaica 42.3 W 2.7% 0.1 TWh
Iran 40.8 W 3.5% 3.8 TWh
Tanzania 40.5 W 24.2% 2.7 TWh
Rwanda 40.1 W 51.9% 0.6 TWh
Texas 39.2 W 0.2% 1.2 TWh
Ohio 36.4 W 0.2% 0.4 TWh
Syria 33.4 W 3.7% 0.8 TWh
Vanuatu 31.2 W 12.5% 0.0 TWh
Iraq 30.6 W 0.9% 1.4 TWh
South Africa 27.7 W 0.8% 1.8 TWh
Central African Republic 27.5 W 100.0% 0.1 TWh
Madagascar 26.9 W 31.1% 0.8 TWh
Estonia 26.7 W 0.4% 0.0 TWh
Guadeloupe 26.0 W 0.6% 0.0 TWh
Hungary 24.7 W 0.5% 0.2 TWh
Liberia 23.7 W 33.3% 0.1 TWh
Sierra Leone 21.3 W 85.7% 0.2 TWh
Burundi 19.0 W 53.1% 0.3 TWh
Afghanistan 18.1 W 10.4% 0.8 TWh
Senegal 17.1 W 3.6% 0.3 TWh
Morocco 16.9 W 1.9% 0.7 TWh
Hawaii 16.7 W 0.2% 0.0 TWh
Haiti 16.5 W 18.8% 0.2 TWh
Cuba 10.9 W 0.8% 0.1 TWh
Togo 8.6 W 4.0% 0.1 TWh
Kansas 7.9 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Burkina Faso 5.2 W 3.6% 0.1 TWh
Bangladesh 5.0 W 0.8% 0.9 TWh
Netherlands 3.1 W 0.0% 0.1 TWh
Florida 3.0 W 0.0% 0.1 TWh
Illinois 2.4 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Jordan 1.8 W 0.1% 0.0 TWh
Turkmenistan 1.4 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Denmark 1.1 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Rhode Island 0.5 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Algeria 0.4 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
New Jersey -24.1 W -0.3% -0.2 TWh
Virginia -27.6 W -0.2% -0.2 TWh
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