RWE Expands Wind Portfolio in Germany
By Editorial Dept - Apr 23, 2025RWE is expanding its onshore wind presence in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania with a new 22.8-megawatt wind farm near Papenhagen, set to be commissioned in mid-2026. The project includes four wind turbines and will provide clean electricity for approximately 20,000 households. Construction began after RWE secured the project through a competitive auction run by Germany's Federal Network Agency at the end of 2024.
As part of its commitment to local communities, RWE will voluntarily pay 0.2 cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity produced—an estimated €130,000 annually—for regional development. An additional wind turbine is being constructed nearby on behalf of a project partner.
Katja Wünschel, CEO of RWE Renewables Europe & Australia, emphasized the company’s commitment to accelerating wind energy deployment in Germany, highlighting the importance of local stakeholder benefits.
RWE’s continued expansion comes at a time of shifting dynamics in the renewable energy investment landscape. According to BloombergNEF, global acquisitions of clean power assets fell 26% in 2024 to 89.4 GW, due to a volatile M&A environment. However, strategic players such as RWE, Masdar, and TotalEnergies capitalized on the downturn by acquiring high-quality assets at lower valuations, strengthening their portfolios for long-term growth.
Despite broader market hesitancy, RWE’s steady investment signals confidence in wind energy’s role in Europe’s energy transition and in its ability to turn short-term market weakness into long-term opportunity.
Record Wind Energy Installations Not Enough to Meet Renewables Goals
By Charles Kennedy - Apr 23, 2025
The world installed a record-high wind power capacity last year, but this isn’t enough to meet the goal of tripling renewable energy capacity by the end of the decade, the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) said in a new report on Wednesday.
Globally, a total of 117 gigawatts (GW) of wind energy were installed in 2024—a record year for new capacity, the wind industry body said in its 2025 Global Wind Report.
New wind capacity boomed despite policy uncertainty and instability, GWEC said.
It also noted “Yet, this momentum is not enough. To deliver the full benefits of wind energy, and align with COP28's agreement to triple global renewable capacity by 2030, wind deployment must scale rapidly.”
Moreover, GWEC pointed out that although 2024 was another record year for wind installations, “the headline numbers mask big disparities in terms of the pace of deployment across global markets, with the lion’s share of installations taking place in a small number of key mature markets, including China and Europe.”
Looking forward, the industry body warns of increasing policy instability in some markets and points to the need to improve permitting, grid transmission, and auctioning mechanisms to keep pace with electrification, while fulfilling globally agreed ambitions to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030.
The wind power industry now faces new headwinds, including macroeconomic pressures, fragmented trade, supply chain misalignment, and disinformation.
“While wind energy continues to drive investment and jobs, improve energy security and lower consumer costs, we are seeing a more volatile policy environment in some parts of the world, including ideologically driven attacks on wind and renewables and the halting of under construction projects, threatening investment certainty,” said Ben Backwell, CEO of GWEC.
Even with record-breaking wind and solar installations, the world is not on track to reach the goal of tripling renewables capacity by 2030, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in October. This assessment of a shortfall in the needed capacity came before the latest headwinds for the sector emerged—unwelcome U.S. administration, tariff wars threatening cost inflation and supply-chain chaos, and a gloomier outlook of the global economy.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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