Spain ENERGY
Vandellos nuclear power plant in Tarragona Province
Courtesy Embassy of Spain, Washington
Spain is poor in energy resources, with the exception
of
coal. Rapid industrial growth has intensified the problems
caused
by insufficient oil reserves, dwindling supplies of easily
accessible high-quality coal, and inadequate water for
power
generation. Until the early 1980s, Spain increasingly
depended
upon imported petroleum, and overall energy consumption
continued
to grow in the 1973-79 period. Following adjustment to a
slower
rate of economic growth and to the changed energy market
of the
1970s, Spanish energy consumption declined in the early
1980s.
The National Energy Plan (Plan Energetico
Nacional--PEN), the
basic statement of official energy policy, was first
formulated
in 1978. Revised in 1983 to cover the 1984-93 period, the
new PEN
aimed at a rationalization of energy consumption and a
reduction
in Spain's dependence on imported energy. It pressed, in
addition, for a reorganization of the oil industry and for
a
financial reorganization of the electricity industry. In
contrast
to the 1978-87 plan, it reduced the role of nuclear
energy.
Data as of December 1988
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