MONTHLY ELECTRICITY STATISTICS, March 2007  -  2
OECD Europe
TWh
  Mar/07 Mar/06 The last 3 months Year-to-Date Past Year
      % change   Dec/06   Jan/07   Feb/07   Jan-Mar 2007   % change   2006  
             
+ Combustible Fuels   160.2   -8.8%     163.9   169.6   155.0     484.7 -9.5%    1 865   54.9%
+ Nuclear   78.0   -5.0%     83.2   84.8   74.2     237.0 -5.9%     929   27.4%
+ Hydro   48.3   -2.9%     46.4   46.6   46.4     141.3 2.0%     509   15.0%
+ Geoth./Wind/Solar/Other   9.4   26.9%     9.3   9.9   8.8     28.1 30.7%     93   2.7%
= Indigenous Production   295.9   -6.0%     302.8   310.8   284.4     891.1 -6.0%    3 396   100.0%
+ Imports   28.5   -1.7%     30.3   28.0   25.8     82.3 -3.2%     333  
- Exports   28.1   2.6%     29.6   28.1   26.2     82.4 3.0%     315  
             
                                 
= Electricity Supplied   296.3   -6.4%     303.6   310.7   284.0     891.1 -6.5%    3 413  
                                 
                  Period  Date           
-  Electricity production was 295.9 TWh in March 2007.
- This was lower by 19.0 TWh, or 6 %, compared to March 2006.
- This was an increase of 11.5 TWh, or 4 %, compared to the previous month.
- Geoth./Wind/Solar/Other production showed the most significant percentage change compared to the previous month 
with an increase of 6.5 %, or 0.6 TWh.
- Total production for the year-to-date was 891.1 TWh. Comparing this to the same period last year shows that:
- Total production was lower by 56.5 TWh, or 6 %.
- Geoth./Wind/Solar/Other production showed the largest percentage change by fuel type, being 30.7 % higher.
- Trade volume decreased by 0.4 TWh, or 0.2 %.
Electricity Production Compared to Previous Year 'Year to Date' Comparison of Production by Fuel Type
COUNTRY NOTES:
OECD Europe includes Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Norway, Poland, the Slovak Republic,
Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom.
© OECD/IEA, 2007                               INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY