Renewable Energy in Burundi

In 2008, Burundi generated 0.21 billion kilowatthours of electricity from an installed capacity base of 52 megawatts. The top 2 energy sources overall were Hydroelectricity (98.08% of total capacity) and Conventional Thermal (1.92%).

In 2008, Burundi produced 0 quadrillion BTUs (QBTUs) of primary energy, an increase of 0 QBTUs over the prior year and a compound growth rate of 17.67% over a 5 year period.

Primary energy consumption meanwhile increased by 19.19% over the prior year to 0.01 QBTUs, equating to 0.92 million BTUs per capita which places Burundi into the 98th percentile of countries worldwide for per capita primary energy consumption.

Burundi’s total electricity capacity has increased on an annual compound basis by 0.95% over the last 20 years to 52 megawatts (MW) in 2008. In the last year, the total installed capacity base increased by 19 megawatts (+57.58%) with the largest source of new capacity being Hydroelectricity (+19 megawatts).

Total renewable energy capacity accounts for 98.08% of this total installed capacity base whilst renewable energy sources excluding hydropower account for 0%.

Hydroelectricity experienced the fastest capacity growth rate (59.38%) in the last year whilst Hydroelectricity Energy added the most capacity in the last 5 years, reaching 51 MW in 2008.

Total electricity generation meanwhile climbed 76.27% over the last year to 0.21 billion kilowatthours (bn kWh) in 2008 with the largest source for electricity generation being Hydroelectricity (99.04% of total net generation).

Conventional sources including conventional thermal (coal, petroleum, gas), nuclear power and hydro pumped storage accounted for 0.96% of total electricity generated, down from 2.17% 5 years previously.

In 2009, Burundi had a zero balance net import requirement. There were no exports of electricity. Conventional Energy sources represented 1.92% of total installed capacity in Burundi in 2008, a decrease of -11.59 percentage points over a 5 year period.

Conventional thermal energy had an installed capacity base of 1 MW in 2008, a change of 0 MW over the previous year and a -27.52% change on a compound basis over a 5 year period. Conventional thermal energy has seen its share of total installed capacity decrease from 13.51% in 2004 to 1.92% in 2008. Conventional Thermal Energy generated 0 billion kilowatthours of electricity in 2008, equating to 2 billion kilowatthours of electricity per million kilowatts of capacity.

Renewable Energy sources represented 98.08% of total installed capacity in Burundi in 2008, an increase of 11.59 percentage points over a 5 year period.

19 MW of capacity was added since 2007 and 0 MW were retired. Hydroelectricity Energy grew the most, adding 19 MW of capacity.

This renewable energy capacity generated 0.21 billion kilowatthours of electricity (99.04% of the total), primarily from Hydroelectricity (100% of the 0.21 bn kWh generated).

Hydroelectricity had an installed capacity base of 51 MW in 2008, a change of 19 MW over the previous year. It’s share of total installed capacity increased from 86.49% in 2004 to 98.08% in 2008 and it’s share of renewable installed capacity remained unchanged at 100% in 2008.

Hydroelectricity generated 0.21 billion kilowatthours of electricity in 2008, equating to 99.04% of the total electricity generated. This is equivalent to 4.04 billion kilowatthours of electricity per million kilowatts of capacity, which was the highest ratio amongst renewable energy sources.

Burundi has 0.23% of the total regional capacity for Hydroelectricity and ranks at #124 in the world for Hydroelectricity installed capacity.

In 2008, total carbon dioxide emissions in Burundi reached 0.36 million Metric Tonnes (mn MT), a compound decrease of -1.42% over a 5 year period. Burundi’s total represented 0.03% of total regional emissions and 0% of total world emissions.

On a per capita basis meanwhile, Burundi ranked at #205 worldwide, with per capita emissions increasing on 2007 by 0 metric tonnes to 0.04 metric tonnes.

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