New Government figures reveal that wind generated a record amount of electricity in 2018.

The provisional statistics, published in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy’s quarterly 'Energy Trends' report, show that wind provided a record 17.1 percent of the UK’s electricity last year. This was made up of 9.1 percent from onshore wind and eight percent from offshore wind, both new annual records.

Overall, renewables generated a record 33.3 percent. Low carbon generation (renewables and nuclear) reached a record 52.8 percent. Nuclear provided 19.5 percent, with gas generating 39.4 percent, and coal generation dropped to a record annual low of 5 percent.

In 2017, wind provided 14.8 percent of the UK’s electricity and renewables overall provided 29.3 percent

Renewable UK’s Deputy Chief Executive Emma Pinchbeck said: “These record breaking figures demonstrate the unstoppable momentum for renewables, with spectacular global cost reductions in onshore and offshore wind, as well as battery storage, being reported this week by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

“Wind power in the UK is driving a transformation in energy, to clean, affordable and flexible power that works hand in hand with exciting technologies of the future like storage and EVs.

“We need Government to fully recognise that renewables are the future in our energy policy - from fair markets for flexible power and innovation funding for new technologies, to removing the obstacles in the way of our cheapest form of generation: onshore wind".