Energy in Sweden

Energy in Sweden is characterized by relatively high per capita production and consumption, and a reliance on imports for fossil fuel supplies.

[2] A high carbon tax on heating fuels has contributed to a noticeable uptake in biomass and electricity usage in the heating/cooling sector, with Eurostat reporting Sweden had the highest share of renewable energy for heating and cooling in the EU, at 69% (2022).

[5][6] Nevertheless, sustainability measures have reduced total emissions in Sweden, even as the population has increased; at 3.6 tonnes per person, Sweden's 2022 per capita Carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions are 45% lower than 1990 levels and below the world average.

[14] Eurostat reported that Sweden had already exceeded the Directive's 2020 target in 2014[15] reaching 52.6% of total final energy consumption provided by renewables, up from 38.7% in 2004.

[16] This makes Sweden the leading country within the EU-28 group in terms of renewable energy use by share, followed by Finland and Latvia at 38.7%, Austria at 33.1% and Denmark on 29.2%.

[19][20] As of 2015[update] the plan of the certificate system was to support 25 TWh of new renewable electricity generation by 2020.

[30] In correlation one must note that Swedish use of energy per inhabitant is much higher than average in Europe.

[34] Sweden has a wave power station outside Lysekil run by Uppsala University.

[38] Sweden published the sustainability criteria for biofuels (2011) which consider the areas with high biological values to be protected in respect to fuels production.

[42] Sweden is preparing to dismantle and demolish six large nuclear power reactors on three sites in coming years.

This excludes the costs of near-surface disposal facilities for very low-level waste at Ringhals, Oskarshamn, and Forsmark.

[46] In January 1991, Sweden enacted a carbon tax of SEK 250 per 1000 kg ($40 at the time, or EUR 27 at current rates) on the use of oil, coal, natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas, petrol, and aviation fuel used in domestic travel.

[49] According to a 2019 study, the tax was instrumental in substantially reducing Sweden's carbon dioxide emissions.

[50] The tax is also credited by Swedish Society for Nature Conservation climate change expert Emma Lindberg and University of Lund Professor Thomas Johansson with spurring a significant move from hydrocarbon fuels to biomass.

Historical energy consumption in Sweden by source. Renewables and nuclear is given as the electricity produced.
Wind turbines in Sweden
Historical electricity production by source
Development of carbon dioxide emissions