According to the “Electricity Market Cutting Report” of the Energy Market Regulatory Authority (EMRA) for November, 26.5 percent of licensed electricity production is natural gas power plants, 24.5 percent hydroelectric power plants with dams, 11.9 percent wind power plants and 10.9 percent was obtained from imported coal power plants.
These resources were followed by lignite, river, biomass, geothermal, solar, hard coal, asphaltite, fuel oil, naphtha, LNG and diesel fuel, respectively.
Turkey’s licensed electricity production reached 94 million 995 thousand 97 megawatt-hours in November, an increase of 3.4 percent compared to the same month of the previous year. The billed electricity consumption measure decreased by 9.9 percent in a one-to-one period and became 19 million 106 thousand 551 megawatt-hours.
83.4 percent of the consumption was for residence, 14.4 percent for public and private services and other subscribers, and 1.5 percent for agricultural activities. The share of lighting was recorded as 0.6 percent and the share of the industry as 0.2 percent.
Number of subscribers and delegation increased
The number of electricity subscribers increased by 2.6 percent in November compared to the same month of the previous year and reached 48 million 415 thousand 458.
In this period, the number of residential consumers increased by approximately 4 percent and the number of agricultural activities consumers increased by 3.5 percent. The number of lighting consumers decreased by 16.6 percent, the number of industrial consumers decreased by 10.5 percent, and the number of public and private services and other consumers decreased by 4.3 percent.
Turkey’s licensed electricity delegation power increased by approximately 3.4 percent in this period and reached approximately 94 thousand 996 megawatts.
26.5 percent of the installed power comes from natural gas cycle power plants, 24.5 percent from hydroelectric power plants with dams, 11.9 percent from wind power plants, 10.9 percent from imported coal power plants, and the rest from facilities that generate electricity from other power sources. formed.