
Renewable energy in Tuvalu is a growing sector of the country's energy supply. has committed to sourcing 100% of its from . This is considered possible because of the small size of the population of Tuvalu and its abundant solar energy resources due to its tropical location. It is somewhat complicated because Tuvalu consists of nine inhabited islands. The Tuvalu National Energy Policy (TNEP) was formulated in 2009, and the Energy Str. [pdf]

, as of 2014, planned to "spend US$155 million between 2015 and 2017 on developing technologies that will reduce spending on power, as well as boosting energy saving and efficiency" and set 2030 as the date to deliver universal for "power generation, distribution and consumption" and to export them to all of Southeast Asia. Its first export was to Canadian power company with which it committed to build a pilot project in the [pdf]

The first were installed in 2009, and are not associated with storage. The installed capacity is 13 MW, in particular via the Longoni power plant, inaugurated in 2010. Solar energy is the only renewable energy with significant development potential on the island; the wind potential (22 MW according to a study) would not lead to a significant production because the wind blows only 6 months per year. [pdf]
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