The author analysed that in 2014, the installed capacity of
non-hydroelectric renewable energy, such as solar, wind and biomass
gasification, in Vietnam stood at 109 MW, about one third of one percent of the
country’s total installed capacity of 34,079 MW. At the time, Vietnam’s
electricity mix was dominated by hydropower (46 percent), coal (29 percent) and
natural gas (22 percent).
By the end of 2019, wind and solar accounted for 5,700 MW of installed capacity,
about 10 percent of the total supply. That means Vietnam has seen wind and solar
go from essentially zero to 10 percent of its supply in only five years.
The author cited the Asian Development Bank’s data as saying that Vietnam’s
economy has grown at 6 percent or more every year since 2014, reaching 7 percent
in 2018 and 2019.
This rapid growth is driving up energy consumption at an extraordinary rate, he
wrote.
Source: VNA