Turkey's electricity consumption up 27.1% in April

- Electricity imports for April from neighboring countries show decrease of 46% compared to April last year

Turkey's electricity consumption increased by 27.1% in April, compared to the same month of 2020, according to the latest data released by Turkey's Energy and Natural Resources Ministry.

The country's power consumption reached 25.62 billion kilowatt-hours last month and electricity production also increased by 28.2% to 25.83 billion kilowatt-hours compared to April 2020.

Out of April's total production, hydro plants generated 31.1% while 21.6% was derived from natural gas and 15.4% from local coal.

The share of imported coal plants in electricity generation was 13.1%. Wind plants generated 8.9% and the remaining share came from geothermal, fuel oil and biogas plants.

Last month, Turkey's electricity imports from neighboring countries decreased by around 46% to 88.77 million kilowatt-hours compared to 163.77 million kilowatt-hours in April 2020.

Electricity exports increased by around 85% to 302 million kilowatt-hours.

Turkey's total installed power capacity reached 97.07 gigawatts as of the end of March 2021, according to official figures.

Korkut Ozturkmen, Aksa Energy's deputy chairman cited shutdowns last year due to Covid-19 as the main reason for the high annual increase in electricity consumption.

He emphasized that despite the COVID-19 impact, Turkey still saw positive net growth in electricity consumption, with industrial consumption normalizing faster than other countries.

By Murat Temizer

Anadolu Agency

energy@aa.com.tr