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15% of global electricity is generated from Hydropower

14.57 % Share of global electricity
24 gCO2eq/kWh Carbon Intensity
Hydropower

Hydroelectric power, often referred to as hydro, is a form of energy that harnesses the power of moving water to generate electricity. This clean electricity source is achieved by the gravitational force of falling or flowing water, commonly from reservoirs, rivers, or waterfalls. Hydro is part of a broader array of low-carbon energy technologies, which are vital for transitioning to a sustainable electricity system. As a renewable source, it plays a crucial role in diversifying the energy mix and reducing reliance on fossil fuels, which are significantly more carbon-intensive and contribute to climate change and air pollution.

Electricity generation from hydro involves constructing a dam across a river to create a reservoir or using the kinetic energy of flowing water directly. When water is released from the reservoir, it flows through turbines, causing them to spin. These turbines are connected to generators, which convert the mechanical energy from the spinning turbines into electrical energy. The generated electricity is then transmitted through the power grid for use in homes, businesses, and industries. This process is efficient and contributes to the low carbon intensity associated with hydroelectric power, which is about 24 gCO2eq/kWh.

One of the key advantages of hydroelectric power is its low carbon intensity, which is significantly lower than that of fossil fuel sources like coal, gas, and oil. Hydro's carbon intensity is around 24 gCO2eq/kWh, making it an excellent clean energy source alongside other low-carbon technologies such as solar, wind, and nuclear. For instance, nuclear energy has a carbon intensity of about 12 gCO2eq/kWh, wind at approximately 11 gCO2eq/kWh, and solar at roughly 45 gCO2eq/kWh. Compared to coal, which has a carbon intensity of 820 gCO2eq/kWh, these low-carbon technologies are transforming the global electricity landscape by lowering emissions and addressing climate challenges.

Globally, hydroelectric power is responsible for generating approximately 15% of the world's electricity, underscoring its essential role in the energy mix. Its contribution is even more pronounced in several countries; for example, hydro accounts for 90% of electricity in Norway, a testament to its effectiveness and reliability. In Iceland, hydro provides 72% of the nation's electricity, and in Bhutan, it constitutes 93%. In Canada, more than half of the electricity comes from hydro, and even in Montana, about a third of the electricity is generated from this source. These figures highlight the potential for other regions to bolster their reliance on clean energy, complementing nuclear and solar to meet electricity demand with minimal environmental impact.

Emphasizing hydroelectric power's role in the transition to clean electricity aligns with the need for a broader adoption of low-carbon technologies, like nuclear and solar. As global electricity demand grows, driven by factors such as electrification and the rise of advanced technologies like AI, expanding clean energy sources becomes crucial. By leveraging hydro alongside solar and nuclear, we can secure a sustainable, reliable, and low-emission electricity future, significantly cutting reliance on polluting fossil fuels. This path is essential for both environmental preservation and the continued growth of electricity generation to meet future needs.

Country/Region kWh/person % TWh
Iceland 33660.4 W 71.7% 13.5 TWh
Norway 25933.0 W 90.1% 145.0 TWh
Bhutan 14192.5 W 93.1% 11.2 TWh
Canada 8750.5 W 55.6% 349.8 TWh
Greenland 8397.5 W 87.0% 0.5 TWh
Montana 8169.1 W 33.0% 9.4 TWh
Washington 7881.0 W 61.4% 63.0 TWh
Oregon 6497.5 W 41.8% 27.8 TWh
Paraguay 6428.9 W 99.5% 44.0 TWh
Sweden 6250.1 W 41.9% 66.8 TWh
South Dakota 5409.2 W 23.0% 5.1 TWh
Laos 5218.6 W 76.5% 40.0 TWh
Switzerland 4770.5 W 56.0% 43.0 TWh
New Zealand 4213.6 W 51.6% 22.2 TWh
Idaho 4205.2 W 29.0% 8.6 TWh
Austria 3792.6 W 50.2% 35.1 TWh
Albania 3097.9 W 96.7% 8.7 TWh
Georgia 2979.4 W 79.2% 11.3 TWh
North Dakota 2599.8 W 4.9% 2.1 TWh
Alaska 2536.2 W 28.2% 1.9 TWh
Montenegro 2526.1 W 46.9% 1.6 TWh
Faroe Islands 2407.9 W 27.1% 0.1 TWh
Venezuela 2296.0 W 78.3% 65.0 TWh
Finland 2156.2 W 14.2% 12.1 TWh
Uruguay 2126.1 W 50.4% 7.2 TWh
French Guiana 2011.5 W 61.2% 0.6 TWh
Slovenia 1979.3 W 28.7% 4.2 TWh
Tajikistan 1904.0 W 88.8% 20.2 TWh
Brazil 1902.0 W 54.0% 405.2 TWh
New Caledonia 1880.9 W 17.5% 0.5 TWh
Maine 1781.0 W 16.1% 2.5 TWh
Portugal 1684.8 W 31.4% 17.7 TWh
Vermont 1669.0 W 17.6% 1.1 TWh
Costa Rica 1636.2 W 66.0% 8.4 TWh
Alabama 1613.8 W 5.9% 8.4 TWh
Bosnia & Herzegovina 1547.8 W 34.5% 4.8 TWh
Latvia 1484.7 W 41.4% 2.8 TWh
Suriname 1431.2 W 42.1% 0.9 TWh
Russia 1412.0 W 17.6% 204.8 TWh
Panama 1379.3 W 47.8% 6.2 TWh
Wyoming 1369.0 W 1.8% 0.8 TWh
Croatia 1365.5 W 34.4% 5.2 TWh
New York 1290.3 W 15.8% 25.4 TWh
Serbia 1272.9 W 24.4% 8.5 TWh
Ecuador 1268.3 W 69.1% 23.0 TWh
Chile 1207.4 W 27.5% 24.0 TWh
Tennessee 1120.6 W 7.1% 8.2 TWh
Colombia 1065.9 W 63.7% 57.1 TWh
Arkansas 1033.3 W 5.0% 3.2 TWh
People's Republic of China 994.7 W 13.6% 1416.2 TWh
France 952.9 W 11.8% 63.7 TWh
Malaysia 948.5 W 18.2% 33.7 TWh
Vietnam 946.7 W 31.1% 95.8 TWh
Peru 937.3 W 50.1% 32.0 TWh
New Hampshire 870.6 W 6.9% 1.2 TWh
Kentucky 866.8 W 4.9% 4.0 TWh
Kyrgyzstan 855.4 W 77.9% 6.2 TWh
Zambia 824.7 W 87.8% 17.1 TWh
Spain 792.9 W 14.7% 38.2 TWh
Luxembourg 758.4 W 8.2% 0.5 TWh
EU 753.2 W 13.0% 339.8 TWh
United States 752.8 W 5.8% 260.4 TWh
Argentina 748.5 W 23.6% 34.3 TWh
West Virginia 746.4 W 2.6% 1.3 TWh
Réunion 722.9 W 18.7% 0.6 TWh
Turkey 715.9 W 18.4% 63.3 TWh
California 708.3 W 9.3% 27.8 TWh
French Polynesia 677.8 W 26.8% 0.2 TWh
Japan 675.6 W 8.6% 83.2 TWh
Italy 658.3 W 14.1% 38.9 TWh
Arizona 651.8 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
Nevada 626.8 W 4.3% 2.1 TWh
Armenia 616.8 W 20.6% 1.8 TWh
Gabon 611.7 W 40.3% 1.5 TWh
North Macedonia 604.7 W 20.9% 1.1 TWh
Slovakia 604.7 W 12.3% 3.3 TWh
Romania 592.6 W 25.0% 11.2 TWh
Belize 583.8 W 32.9% 0.2 TWh
Nebraska 559.7 W 2.8% 1.1 TWh
Kazakhstan 547.6 W 9.4% 11.3 TWh
The World 531.7 W 14.6% 4339.6 TWh
Mozambique 480.7 W 82.7% 16.2 TWh
Australia 478.2 W 4.7% 12.9 TWh
Namibia 445.5 W 28.4% 1.3 TWh
North Carolina 423.1 W 3.1% 4.7 TWh
South Carolina 381.5 W 2.0% 2.1 TWh
Bulgaria 377.9 W 6.9% 2.5 TWh
Oklahoma 375.3 W 1.7% 1.5 TWh
Republic of China (Taiwan) 369.0 W 3.0% 8.5 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
El Salvador 347.7 W 26.4% 2.2 TWh
Wisconsin 338.5 W 2.6% 2.0 TWh
Zimbabwe 334.1 W 53.5% 5.5 TWh
Greece 329.0 W 6.3% 3.3 TWh
Guatemala 311.7 W 40.6% 5.7 TWh
Dominica 300.9 W 13.3% 0.0 TWh
Sri Lanka 300.8 W 36.7% 7.0 TWh
Iowa 300.5 W 1.3% 1.0 TWh
Germany 300.1 W 5.4% 25.5 TWh
Cambodia 299.9 W 24.7% 5.3 TWh
Colorado 293.9 W 2.8% 1.8 TWh
Bolivia 282.9 W 28.3% 3.5 TWh
Azerbaijan 279.2 W 9.9% 2.9 TWh
Lithuania 278.8 W 5.5% 0.8 TWh
Ghana 272.0 W 37.8% 9.2 TWh
Ukraine 270.4 W 9.8% 11.1 TWh
Maryland 268.3 W 2.6% 1.7 TWh
Equatorial Guinea 265.2 W 31.2% 0.5 TWh
Czechia 256.8 W 3.9% 2.8 TWh
Eswatini 243.8 W 20.1% 0.3 TWh
Iran 238.7 W 5.6% 21.8 TWh
Sudan 229.8 W 65.2% 11.5 TWh
Lesotho 210.0 W 52.7% 0.5 TWh
Guinea 208.3 W 74.1% 3.0 TWh
Mexico 202.6 W 7.3% 26.7 TWh
St. Vincent & Grenadines 197.5 W 13.3% 0.0 TWh
Georgia (US) 193.2 W 1.3% 2.2 TWh
Utah 188.3 W 1.7% 0.7 TWh
Cameroon 185.4 W 62.7% 5.3 TWh
Uzbekistan 185.1 W 8.3% 6.6 TWh
Ireland 183.1 W 2.6% 1.0 TWh
Myanmar (Burma) 174.8 W 37.7% 9.5 TWh
Congo - Brazzaville 169.8 W 20.3% 1.1 TWh
Missouri 162.9 W 1.2% 1.0 TWh
South Korea 161.1 W 1.4% 8.3 TWh
Louisiana 155.1 W 0.6% 0.7 TWh
Samoa 138.5 W 20.0% 0.0 TWh
Ethiopia 136.9 W 96.5% 17.6 TWh
Pakistan 136.4 W 18.8% 34.4 TWh
Egypt 136.0 W 6.7% 15.8 TWh
Dominican Republic 129.3 W 5.9% 1.5 TWh
Congo - Kinshasa 129.2 W 79.0% 13.7 TWh
Minnesota 125.3 W 1.0% 0.7 TWh
Lebanon 121.2 W 15.5% 0.7 TWh
Sub-Saharan Africa 119.7 W 28.6% 147.3 TWh
India 112.3 W 8.3% 164.2 TWh
Pennsylvania 111.9 W 0.6% 1.5 TWh
Belgium 111.4 W 1.6% 1.3 TWh
Côte d’Ivoire 107.5 W 30.1% 3.4 TWh
Uganda 105.3 W 86.6% 5.0 TWh
United Kingdom 103.2 W 2.3% 7.2 TWh
Papua New Guinea 96.3 W 21.1% 1.0 TWh
Nicaragua 95.3 W 11.8% 0.7 TWh
Philippines 93.2 W 8.9% 10.8 TWh
Thailand 89.4 W 2.7% 6.4 TWh
Indonesia 87.4 W 7.0% 24.6 TWh
Malawi 82.2 W 92.3% 1.7 TWh
Connecticut 75.9 W 0.6% 0.3 TWh
Mauritius 70.7 W 2.8% 0.1 TWh
Mali 69.0 W 35.8% 1.6 TWh
Poland 64.9 W 1.6% 2.5 TWh
Kenya 64.3 W 25.8% 3.6 TWh
Indiana 53.4 W 0.3% 0.4 TWh
Belarus 46.6 W 0.9% 0.4 TWh
São Tomé & Príncipe 44.2 W 11.1% 0.0 TWh
Mauritania 43.1 W 10.4% 0.2 TWh
Massachusetts 43.1 W 0.5% 0.3 TWh
Jamaica 42.3 W 2.7% 0.1 TWh
Tanzania 40.5 W 24.2% 2.7 TWh
Rwanda 40.1 W 51.9% 0.6 TWh
Ohio 39.6 W 0.3% 0.5 TWh
Nigeria 39.1 W 22.6% 9.1 TWh
Michigan 38.6 W 0.3% 0.4 TWh
Moldova 36.3 W 2.8% 0.1 TWh
Texas 34.0 W 0.2% 1.1 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
Hawaii 27.8 W 0.4% 0.0 TWh
Central African Republic 27.5 W 100.0% 0.1 TWh
Madagascar 26.9 W 31.1% 0.8 TWh
Guadeloupe 26.0 W 0.6% 0.0 TWh
Liberia 23.7 W 33.3% 0.1 TWh
Hungary 22.9 W 0.5% 0.2 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
Estonia 17.9 W 0.4% 0.0 TWh
Mongolia 17.2 W 0.6% 0.1 TWh
Senegal 17.1 W 3.6% 0.3 TWh
South Africa 16.7 W 0.5% 1.1 TWh
Haiti 16.5 W 18.8% 0.2 TWh
Puerto Rico 15.5 W 0.3% 0.1 TWh
Morocco 14.7 W 1.2% 0.6 TWh
Cuba 10.9 W 0.8% 0.1 TWh
New Mexico 9.2 W 0.1% 0.0 TWh
Togo 8.6 W 4.0% 0.1 TWh
Kansas 6.4 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Bangladesh 5.4 W 0.9% 0.9 TWh
Florida 5.4 W 0.0% 0.1 TWh
Burkina Faso 5.2 W 3.6% 0.1 TWh
Netherlands 4.4 W 0.1% 0.1 TWh
Illinois 3.6 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
Tunisia 0.8 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Algeria 0.4 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
Rhode Island 0.3 W 0.0% 0.0 TWh
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