Gigawatt
GW
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The gigawatt is a unit of power used to measure the output of large-scale power generation facilities and the consumption of entire electrical grids. One gigawatt is enough to power approximately 700,000 homes.
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Gigawatt (GW)
The gigawatt is a unit of power used to measure the output of large-scale power generation facilities and the consumption of entire electrical grids. One gigawatt is enough to power approximately 700,000 homes.
Characteristics
- Large-scale power unit
- 1 GW = 1,000 megawatts (MW)
- 1 GW = 1,000,000 kilowatts (kW)
- 1 GW = 1,000,000,000 watts (W)
- Used in: power plant capacity, grid infrastructure, energy policy
Applications
- Nuclear and coal power plant capacity ratings
- Renewable energy farm output (large solar/wind installations)
- National and regional electrical grid capacity
- Energy policy discussions and planning
- Electricity market and trading
Real-World Examples
- Large nuclear reactor: 1-1.5 GW capacity
- Major coal power plant: 2-4 GW capacity
- Three Gorges Dam: 22.5 GW (world’s largest)
- Large offshore wind farm: 0.5-2 GW
- Small country electrical demand: 1-5 GW peak
Conversions
- 1 GW = 1,000 MW
- 1 GW = 1,000,000 kW
- 1 GW = 1,341,000 horsepower (hp)
- 1 GW·h = 3,600,000 MJ (for energy over time)
Note on GW vs GWh
- GW (gigawatt): Power - instantaneous capacity
- GWh (gigawatt-hour): Energy - total amount over time
- Example: A 1 GW power plant running for 1 hour produces 1 GWh of energy
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Power Industry International