Electricity consumption rises for the sixth consecutive month in Brazil

October data from CCEE indicates heat and use of air conditioning as the main factors for greater demand
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Consumo de energia elétrica sobe pelo sexto mês consecutivo no Brasil
Photo: Freepik

O Electricity consumption in Brazil rose for the sixth consecutive month, Shutting down October with one demand of 70,047 average MW – a volume 6.2% higher compared to the same period last year. 

The data are from Fortnightly InfoMercado Newsletter, from the CCEE (Electricity Trading Chamber), which associates the increase with heat which has caused a greater use of fans and air conditioning. 

The biggest advance observed by CCEE was in the regulated market, where the residential consumers and the Small businessThe segment used 44,448 average MW last month, a growth of 7.6% year-on-year. 

You remaining 25,599 average MW were provided to the Mercado Livre de Energia, which supplies industry and large companies. In this environment, the increase was 3.8% compared to the same period last year. 

In the Free Energy Market, CCEE monitors energy consumption in 15 branches of economic activity, with the biggest advances recorded in the sectors of extraction of metallic minerals (10.4%), commerce (9.4%), beverages (8.5% ), services (7.2) and food (6.7%). 

Only four sectors recorded lower demand: textiles (-0.2%), sanitation (-1.0%), telecommunications (-2.5%) and vehicles (-4.7%). 

Power generation

To the hydroelectric plants – which are still the country’s main source of energy – supplied almost 50,000 average MW for the SIN (National Interconnected System), a volume 10.6% higher compared to the same period last year. 

You wind farmss produced more than 13,000 average MW (advance of 1.4%), while the solar farms generated more than 2,800 average MW, one growth of 51.9%. 

According to the CCEE, the performance of these three energy sources contributes to a reduction of 16.4% in the participation of thermoelectric plants, used at the most critical moments in the sector to guarantee supply to the population.

Picture of Henrique Hein
Henry Hein
He worked at Correio Popular and Rádio Trianon. He has experience in podcast production, radio programs, interviews and reporting. Has been following the solar sector since 2020.

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