Stephen Lacey, Climate Progress
January 03, 2012
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20 Comments
Just weeks after the solar industry installed the one millionth system in Germany, the country's solar trade association announced that the technology accounted for three percent of total energy generation in 2011 — increasing 60 percent over 2010 to 18.6 terawatt-hours (18.6 billion kilowatt-hours).

Even with changes to the feed-in tariff that have reduced solar photovoltaic installations compared with previous boom years, the sector was still the fastest growing among all other renewable energy sectors in 2011, according to preliminary figures.
This follows data released last week showing that renewable energy accounted for 19.9 percent of electricity production in the country in 2011, growing 16.4 percent over 2010. Meanwhile, overall energy use in the country fell 4.8 percent due to warmer temperatures and increasing efficiency efforts, further boosting the value of solar generation.
This article was originally published on Climate Progress and was republished with permission.
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January 12, 2012
Sorry for the late response, had no time for blogging the last couple of days.
The 5 billion estimate is the German government's, not mine. They might need to adjust that upward since installations saw another world record last year with 7.5 GW over the year and 3.0 alone in December.
I do agree that this form of financing is regressive. On the other hand, it is only about 10 euros a month surcharge for all forms of renewable energy for the average consumer.