Denmark just ran entirely on wind energy for one day
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Denmark capitalized on an unusually windy day Thursday. Their wind turbines produced enough power not only to cover the whole country's needs, but to also lend some to other European countries. By nightfall, they had made 140 percent of the power they used, giving the excess to Germany, Norway, and Sweden. And get this — turbines weren't even running at full capacity, Quartz reports.
"It shows that a world powered 100 percent by renewable energy is no fantasy," European Wind Energy Association spokesman Oliver Joy told The Guardian.
The stats show promise, with one energy consultant predicting Denmark could produce half of its electricity from renewable sources well ahead of the 2020 target.
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Julie Kliegman is a freelance writer based in New York. Her work has appeared in BuzzFeed, Vox, Mental Floss, Paste, the Tampa Bay Times and PolitiFact. Her cats can do somersaults.
