您的浏览器禁用了JavaScript(一种计算机语言,用以实现您与网页的交互),请解除该禁用,或者联系我们。 [WindEurope]:欧洲风能:2025年统计数据及2026-2030年展望 - 发现报告

欧洲风能:2025年统计数据及2026-2030年展望

电气设备 2026-02-26 WindEurope 还是郁闷闷啊
报告封面

2025 Statistics and the outlook for 2026-2030 Wind energy in Europe 2025 Statistics and the outlook for 2026-2030Published in February 2026 windeurope.org TEXT AND ANALYSIS:Giuseppe CostanzoGuy Brindley ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTORS:Alexandre FrémauxFrancesco MeloniGuy WillemsLizet RamirezMariana Batista DISCLAIMER This report summarises new installationsand financing activity in Europe’s windfarms from 1 January to 31 December 2025. EDITOR:Rory O’Sullivan It also analyses how European marketswill develop in the next five years (2026 to2030). The outlook is based on WindEuropeinternal analysis and consultation with itsmembers. DESIGN:Lin Van de Velde INVESTMENT DATA:Clean Energy PipelineIJ GlobalAll currency conversions made at EUR-GBP 0.8679 and EUR-USD 1.3189.Figures include estimates for undisclosed values. The data represents gross installations persite and country unless stated otherwise.Rounding of figures is at the discretion ofthe author. PHOTO COVER:Catalin.Bogdan for Shutterstock This publication contains informationcollected on a regular basis throughout theyear and then verified with relevant mem-bers of the industry ahead of publication.Neither WindEurope, nor its members, northeir related entities are, by means of thispublication, rendering professional adviceor services. Neither WindEurope nor itsmembers shall be responsible for any losswhatsoever sustained by any person whorelies on this publication. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:WindEurope acknowledges the kind cooperation of the following associations and institutions: IG Windkraft (AT) / EDORA, ODE (BE) / BGWEA (BG) / RES Croatia (HR) / Czech Renewable EnergyChamber (CZ) / Green Power Denmark (DK) / Tuuleenergia (EE) / Suomen Tuulivoimayhdistys ry (FI) /France Renouvables, Syndicat des Energies Renouvelables (FR) / BWE, BWO, Deutsche WindGuard,Fachagentur Wind und Solar (DE) / HWEA (EL) / WEI (IE) / Elettricità Futura, ANEV (IT) / Litgrid (LV) /LWPA (LT) / Ministry of Energy and Spatial Planning (LU) / NedZero, WindStats (NL) / Fornybar Norge(NO) / PWEA (PL) / APREN (PT) / RWEA (RO) / RES Serbia (RS) / SAPI (SK) / Green Power Sweden (SE) /AEE (ES) / Suisse Eole (CH) / TÜREB (TK) / UWEA (UA) / EnergyPulse, RenewableUK (UK). MORE INFORMATION:policy@windeurope.org Contents Executive summary7 1.Wind power in 202513 1.1Overview131.2Onshore installations141.3Offshore installations161.4Decommissioning and repowering171.5Power generation181.6Turbine sizes231.7Permitting241.8Auctions and tenders24 2.Wind power in Europe: The full picture29 2.1Europe’s total wind power capacity292.2Decommissioning and repowering trends312.3Turbine trends332.4Power generation trends342.5Investments35 3.Outlook 2026-203037 3.1WindEurope’s Outlook373.2Onshore wind outlook383.3Offshore wind outlook423.4Repowering46 4.Work force49 4.12024 employment figures494.2Key jobs in the wind energy sector504.32030 employment figures514.4Recommendations51 5.European Regulations55 5.1Electrification555.2Permitting555.3Grids565.4A resilient wind supply chain565.5Post‑2030 Climate & Energy targets57 Appendix: auctions & Tenders by country59 Annex: glossary61 Executive summary Europe installed 19.1GW of new wind power capacity in2025. The EU‑27 accounted for 15.1GW of this total. 90% of the wind capacity built in Europe last year wasonshore – and 77% of new wind installations in Europebetween 2026 and 2030 are expected to be onshore. Germany built the most new wind power capacity in 2025.Türkiye and Sweden followed. Germany, France, and the UKwere the only countries to install new capacity both onshoreand offshore. Wind energy continues to play a key role in Europe’spower system. In 2025, wind supplied 19% of all electricityconsumed in the EU‑27. The share was much higherin several countries, reaching 50% in Denmark, 33% inLithuania and Ireland, 31% in the UK, and 30% in Sweden. Europe’s Governments awarded 29.4GW of new wind powercapacity across 10 countries in 2025. This included 22.6GWof onshore wind and 6.8GW of offshore wind. The totalawarded volume was lower than in 2024 (36.6GW). Thiswas largely due to the UK’s delay in publishing the results ofits 2025 Contracts for Difference Allocation Round 7, whichultimately awarded a record 9.7GW of new wind capacity inJanuary‑February 2026. But grid bottlenecks, ongoing permitting challenges in manycountries and slower‑than‑expected growth in electricitydemand continue to hold back deployment. Looking ahead, we now expect Europe to install an averageof 30GW of new wind capacity per year between 2026and 2030. This would take total installed wind capacity to439GW by 2030, including 366GW onshore and 73GWoffshore. In the EU, we expect average installations of 22GW a yearwhich would take total installed wind capacity to 343GW by2030 – 303GW onshore and 40GW offshore. This remainswell below the EU’s target of 425GW1. Investments in new wind farms reached €45bn in 2025.Final Investment Decisions (FIDs) covered 15.5GW of n