1THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
Wind in power2015 European statistics
February 2016
2
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
ContentsExecutive summary .............................................................................. 3
2015 annual installations ...................................................................... 5 Wind power capacity installations ................................................. 5 Power capacity installations ......................................................... 6 Renewable power capacity installations ........................................ 7
Trends and cumulative installations ........................................................ 7 Renewable power installations ..................................................... 7 Net changes in EU installed power capacity 2000-2015 ................. 8 Total installed power capacity ....................................................... 8
A closer look at wind power installations ................................................ 9 Total installed power capacity ....................................................... 9 National breakdown of wind power installations ............................. 10 Onshore and offshore annual markets .......................................... 10 Cumulative wind power installations ............................................. 11
Wind power penetration ......................................................................... 12
Investment highlights: trends and developments in 2015 .......................... 13
Data collection and analysisGiorgio Corbetta, European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) Ariola Mbistrova (EWEA)Andrew Ho (EWEA)
Editor: Iván Pineda (EWEA)
Revision: Kristian Ruby (EWEA)
Data sourcesClean Energy Pipeline, January 2016 Platts PowerVision, January 2016EWEA, wind energy dataOEE, ocean energy dataEPIA, solar PV dataESTELA, CSP data
EWEA acknowledges the kind cooperation of the following National Associations and institutions:IG Windkraft (AT) – BOP, EDORA and ODE (BE) - BGWEA (BG) - RP Global Projekti (HR) - K. Ellinas Energy (CY) - CSVE (CZ)– DWIA (DK) – Tuulenergia (EE) – SEV (FO) – Suomen Tuulivoimayhdistys ry (FI) – France Énergie Éolienne and Syndicat des Énergies Renouvelables (FR) – BWE, VDMA and Stiftung Offshore Windenergie (DE) – HWEA (EL) – HWIA (HU) – IWEA (IE) – Landsvirkjun (IS) –ANEV and assoRinnovabili (IT) - LWEA (LV) – LWPA (LT) – Energy Institute Hrvoje Pozar (HR) – Ministry of Sustainable Development and Infrastructures (LU) – NWEA (NL) – PWEA (PL) – APREN (PT) – NorWEA (NO) - RWEA (RO) – Continental Wind Partners (SRB) – Slovak Renewable Energy Agency (SK) – University of Maribor (SI) – RAWI (RS) – Svenskvindenergi (SE) – AEE
(ES) - Suisse Eole (CH) – TÜREB (TK) – UWEA (UA) – RenewableUK (UK).
Photo cover: Courtesy of GE Renewable Energy
3THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
• 12,800 MW of wind power capacity was installed and grid-connected in the EU during 2015, an increase of 6.3% on 2014 installations. 9,766 MW were installed onshore and 3,034 MW offshore.
• Wind power installed more than any other form of power generation in 2015. Wind power accounted for 44.2% of total 2015 power capacity installations.
• Renewable energy accounted for 77% of all new EU power installations in 2015: 22.3 GW of a total 29 GW.
• Big variations between countries in their 2015 new installations reflect the relative effectiveness of policy and regulatory frameworks and uncertainty over future energy policy in EU Member States.
•There is now 142 GW of installed wind power capacity in the EU: 131 GW onshore and 11 GW offshore.
• The EU total installed power capacity increased by 11 GW net in 2015 to 908 GW. • Wind energy has overtaken hydro as the third largest source of power generation
in the EU with a 15.6% share of total power capacity. • Wind power accounts for one third of all new power installations since 2000
in the EU. • Conventional power sources such as fuel oil and coal continue to decommission
more capacity than they install. Gas installations also saw a high rate of capacity decommissioning in 2015.
• Germany remains the EU country with the largest installed capacity (45 GW), followed by Spain (23 GW), the UK (14 GW) and France (10 GW). 16 EU countries have over 1 GW wind power capacity installed, nine of these have more than 5 GW.
• 47% of all new installations in 2015 took place in just one country: Germany. Poland, France and the UK followed with 1.3 GW, 1 GW and 970 MW respectively.
• The total wind power capacity installed at the end of 2015 could produce 315 TWh and cover 11.4% of the EU electricity consumption in a normal wind year.
• €26.4 billion was invested in Europe in 2015 to finance wind energy development. This was 40% more than the total investment in 2014.
Executive summary
2015 annual
installations
Trends and total
installations
Wind power
installations
4
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
PORTUGAL 5.1
SPAIN 23
FRANCE 10.4
UNITED KINGDOM
13.6
IRELAND* 2.5
BELGIUM 2,2
NETHERLANDS 3,.4
LUXEMBOURG0.1
GERMANY 45
POLAND 5.1
DENMARK 5.1
SWEDEN 6
FINLAND 1
ESTONIA 0.3
LATVIA0.1
LITHUANIA0.4
BELARUS0.003
ITALY 9
AUSTRIA 2.4
CZECH REPUBLIC
0.3 SLOVAKIA0.003
HUNGARY0.3
SLOVENIA0.003
ROMANIA 3
SERBIA0.01
BULGARIA 0.7
GREECE 2.2
MALTA-
RUSSIA0.02
NORWAY0.8
UKRAINE 0.5
SWITZERLAND0.06
CROATIA 0.4
TURKEY 4.7
CYPRUS 0.2
FAROE ISLANDS*0.02
* Provisional dataNote: Annual installations figures reflect the total new capacity added in one year. As such, they are gross figures, not including decommissioning. Cumulative capacity figures are net, including decommissioning year over year. Due to 281 MW of decommissioned capacity, the total 2015 end-of-year cumulative capacity is not exactly equivalent to the sum of the 2014 end-of-year total plus the 2015 annual additions.
Installed 2014 End 2014 Installed 2015 End 2015Candidate Countries (MW)FYROM 37 37 - 37 Serbia - - 9.9 9.9 Turkey 804 3,738 956 4,694 Total 841 3,775 965.9 4,740.9 EFTA (MW)Iceland 1.2 3 - 3 Liechtenstein - - - - Norway 48.0 819.3 22.5 837.6 Switzerland - 60.4 - 60.4
Total 49.2 882.7 22.5 901 Other (MW)Belarus - 3.4 - 3.4 Faroe Islands 11.7 18.3 - 18.3 Russia - 15.4 - 15.4 Ukraine 126.3 497.5 16.6 514.1 Total 138.0 534.7 16.6 551.3 Total Europe 13,065.6 134,252.7 13,805.2 147,772
Installed 2014 End 2014 Installed
2015 End 2015
EU Capacity (MW)Austria 405 2,089.2 323 2,411.5
Belgium 293.5 1,958.7 274.2 2,228.7
Bulgaria 10.1 691.2 - 691.2
Croatia 85.7 346.5 76.2 422.7
Cyprus - 146.7 10.8 157.5
Czech Republic 14 281.5 - 281.5
Denmark 104.9 4,881.7 216.8 5,063.8
Estonia 22.8 302.7 0.7 303.4
Finland 184.3 626.7 379.4 1,000.5
France 1,042.1 9,285.1 1,073.1 10,358.2
Germany 5,242.5 39,127.9 6,013.4 44,946.1
Greece 113.9 1,979.9 172.2 2,151.7
Hungary - 328.9 - 328.9
Ireland* 213.0 2,262.3 224 2,486.3
Italy 107.5 8,662.8 295 8,957.8
Latvia 0.4 61.7 - 61.7
Lithuania 0.5 279.6 144.7 424.3
Luxembourg - 58.3 - 58.3
Malta - - - -
Netherlands 175 2,865 586 3,431
Poland 444.3 3,833.8 1,266.2 5,100
Portugal 222 4,947 132 5,079
Romania 354 2,952.9 23 2,975.9
Slovakia - 3.1 - 3.1
Slovenia 0.9 3.4 - 3.4
Spain 27.5 23,025.3 - 23,025.3
Sweden 1,050.2 5,424.8 614.5 6,024.8
UK 1,923.4 12,633.4 975.1 13,602.5
Total EU-28 12,037.4 129,060.1 12,800.2 141,578.8
Wind power installed in Europe by end of 2015 (cumulative, GW)
European Union: 141,579 MWCandidate Countries: 4,741 MWEFTA: 901 MWTotal Europe: 147,772 MW
FYROM0.04
5THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
2015 annual installations
Wind power capacity installations
During 2015, 13,805.2 MW of wind power was installed across Europe, 5.4% more than in the previous year. 12,800.2 MW of it was in the European Union.
Of the capacity installed in the EU, 9,765.7 MW was onshore and 3,034.5 MW offshore. In 2015, the annual onshore market decreased in the EU by 7.8 %, and offshore installations more than doubled compared to 2014. Overall, EU wind energy annual installations increased by 6.3% compared to 2014 installations.
Germany was the largest market in 2015 in terms of annual installations, installing 6,013.4 MW of new capacity, 2,282.4 MW of which was offshore (38% of total capacity installed in Germany). Poland came second with 1,266.4 MW, more than twice the annual installations in 2014 and one quarter of its national cumulative capacity at end 2015. France was third with 1,073.1 MW and the UK fourth with 975.1 MW, 59% of which was offshore (572.1 MW).
Almost half of the new capacity installed in 2015 came from the pioneering markets of Germany and Denmark. This is mainly due to the stability of the regulatory frameworks in these countries, which gives investors visibility on future projects’ cash flows and favours investments in wind energy.
47% of all new EU installations in 2015 took place in Germany and 73% occurred in the top four markets, a similar trend to the one seen in 2014.
Offshore wind accounted for 24% of total EU wind power installations in 2015, double the share of annual additions in 2014. This confirms the growing relevance of the offshore wind industry in the development of wind energy in the EU.
FIGURE 1: EU MEMBER STATE MARKET SHARES FOR NEW WIND
ENERGY CAPACITY INSTALLED DURING 2015 (MW). TOTAL
12,800.2 MW
Estonia, 1, 0.01%
Cyprus, 11, 0.1%
Romania, 23, 0.2%
Croatia, 76, 0.6%
Portugal, 132, 1%
Lithuania, 145, 1.1%Greece, 172, 1.3%
Denmark, 217, 1.7%
Ireland, 224, 1.7%
Belgium, 274, 2.1%
Italy, 295, 2.3%
Austria3232.5%
Finland3793%
Netherlands5864.6%
Sweden6154.8% UK
9757.6%
France1,0738.4%
Poland1,2669.9%
Germany6,013
47%
6
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
Power capacity installations
In 2015, 28.9 GW of new power generating capacity was installed in the EU, 2.4 GW more than in 2014.
Wind power was the energy technology with the highest installation rate in 2015: 12.8 GW, accounting for 44% of all new installations. Solar PV came second with 8.5 GW (29% of 2015 installations) and coal third with 4.7 GW (16%).
Gas installed 1.9 GW (6.4 % of total installations), CSP 370 MW (1.3%), hydro 238.5 MW (0.8%), biomass 232.4 MW (0.8%), waste 118.5 MW, nuclear 100 MW, geothermal 4.3 MW and ocean 4.1 MW. Peat and fuel oil did not install any capacity in 2015.
During 2015, Member States decommissioned 8 GW of coal capacity, 4.3 GW of gas, 3.3 GW of fuel oil, 1.8 GW of nuclear energy capacity, 518 MW of biomass and 281 MW of wind energy.
FIGURE 3: NEW INSTALLED AND DECOMMISSIONED POWER CAPACITY IN EU (MW)
FIGURE 2: SHARE OF NEW POWER CAPACITY INSTALLATIONS IN
EU (MW). TOTAL 28,948.7 MW
Wind12,80044.2%
Solar PV8,50029.4%
CSP3701.3%
Hydro2380.8%
Biomass2320.8%
Waste1190.4%
Geothermal40.01%
Ocean40.01%
Coal4,71416.3%
Gas1,8676.4%
Nuclear100
0.3%
-10,000
-5,000
5,000
10,000
15,000
PV Wind Gas Coal Biomass Hydro Waste Nuclear PeatCSP Fuel oil OceanGeo-thermal
New Decommissioned
12,800
8,500
370 239 232 119 4 4 -
4,714
1,867
100 -
(281)
- - -
(518)
- - - -
(8,051)
(4,254)
(1,825)
(3,282)
7THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
FIGURE 5: ANNUAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (MW) AND RENEWABLE SHARE (%)
In 2000, new renewable power capacity installations totalled a mere 3.6 GW. Since 2010, annual renewable capacity additions have been between 21 GW and 35 GW, six to ten times higher than in 2000.
The share of renewables in total new power capacity additions has also surged. In 2000, the 3.6 GW
Renewable power capacity installations
Trends & cumulative installations
represented 22.4% of new power capacity installations, increasing to 22 GW representing 77% in 2015.
443 GW of new power capacity has been installed in the EU since 2000. Of this, 30% has been wind power and 58% renewables.
In 2015, renewables installations accounted for a total of 22.3 GW, 77% of all new installed capacity in the EU. It was, the eighth year in a row where renewables contributed over 55% of all additional power capacity in the EU.
Renewable power capacity installations
FIGURE 4: 2015 SHARE OF NEW RENEWABLE POWER CAPACITY
INSTALLATIONS (MW). TOTAL 22,267.9 MW
Wind12,80057.5%
Solar PV8,50038.2%
CSP3701.7%
Hydro2381.1%
Biomass2321%
Waste119
0.5%
Geothermal4
0.01%
Ocean4
0.01%
20
15
: 77
% R
ES
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Peat Fuel oil
Nuclear Coal
Gas
CSP
Waste
Biomass
Ocean
Geothermal
Hydro PV
Wind
8
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
Total installed power capacity
Wind power’s share of total installed power capacity has increased six-fold since 2000, from 2.4% in 2000 to 15.6% in 2015, overtaking hydro as the third largest power generation capacity in the EU and the
FIGURE 7: EU POWER MIX 2000 (MW) FIGURE 8: EU POWER MIX 2015 (MW)
FIGURE 6: NET ELECTRICITY GENERATING INSTALLATIONS IN THE EU, 1995-2015 (MW)
Since 1995, the net growth of wind power (137 GW), gas (120 GW) and solar PV (93 GW) coincided with the net reduction in fuel oil (down 39 GW), coal (down 32 GW) and nuclear (down 2 GW). The other renewable technologies (biomass, hydro, waste, CSP, geothermal and ocean energies) have also been increasing their installed capacity over the past decade, albeit more slowly than wind and solar PV.
Net changes in EU installed power capacity 1995-2015
The EU’s power generation capacity continues to move away from fuel oil, coal, nuclear and gas to a higher share of wind, solar PV and other renewables. Since 2013, gas decommissioned more MW than what it installed but still has the most overall installed capacity.
137,530
120,525
95,350
8,920 8,160 4,622 3,045 431 265 13
(11,808)
(32,580)(39,580)
60,000
40,000
20,000
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
Wind Hydro Gas PV Biomass Waste CSP Peat Ocean Coal Nuclear Fuel oil Geo-thermal
first renewable energy technology in capacity installed. Over the same period, renewables increased their share from 24% of total power capacity in 2000 to 44% in 2015.
Coal133,220
24.4%
Nuclear122,966
22.6%Hydro112,71920.7%
Gas91,92216.9%
Fuel Oil, 62,166, 11.4%
Wind, 12,887, 2.4%
Biomass, 4,568, 0.8%
Waste, 2,199, 0.4% Peat, 1,667, 0.3%
Geothermal, 592, 0.1%
Ocean, 240, 0.04%
Solar PV, 12, 0.02%
Waste, 4,596, 0.5%
Peat, 1,808, 0.2%
Geothermal, 819, 0.1%
Ocean, 253, 0.03%Solar PV, 95,350, 10.5%
Fuel Oil, 33,660, 3.7%
Biomass, 12,140, 1.3%
CSP, 4,975, 0.5%
Nuclear120,20813.2%
Gas191,960
21.1%
Coal159,219
17.5%
Wind141,579
15.6%
Hydro141,07315.5%
9THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
Total installed power capacity
Annual wind power installations in the EU have increased steadily over the past 15 years from 3.2 GW in 2000 to 12.8 GW in 2015, a CAGR of 9%.
A closer look at wind power installations
FIGURE 9: ANNUAL WIND POWER INSTALLATIONS IN EU (GW)
3.2
4.4
5.9 5.5
5.8 6.5
7.2
9.0 8.5
10.3 9.9 9.8
12.1 11.4
12.1 12.8
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
10
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION10 THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
National breakdown of wind power installations
2015 showed important variations between countries in their capacity additions. Germany led with over 6 GW newly installed, reflecting the traditional size and strength of its wind energy market. Three factors facilitated growth: effective policies, the connection of large amounts of offshore capacity installed but not grid-connected in 2014, and a desire by the industry to complete installations before Germany moves to market-based arrangements in 2017. Similarly, Polish developers made use of existing policies and installed over 1,200 MW before the new scheme applies in 2016.
By contrast, the lack of political visibility and ineffective regulations led in some countries to fewer installations in 2015 than in previous years. In particular, Spain, which has been a very strong market, saw new installations fall to zero as a result of inadequate policies. The wind energy industry suffered from changing regulations also in Romania. Stable regulatory frameworks and visibility therefore remain imperative to provide investors with certainty and growing wind power in all parts of Europe.
FIGURE 10: EU MEMBER STATE MARKET SHARES FOR NEW WIND ENERGY CAPACITY INSTALLED DURING 2015 (MW). TOTAL 12,800.2 MW
6,013
1,2661,073 975
615 586379 323 295 274 224 217 172 145 132 76 23 11 1
GermanyPoland
FranceUK
SwedenNetherlands
FinlandAustria
ItalyBelgium
IrelandDenmark
GreeceLithuania
PortugalCroatia
RomaniaCyprus
Estonia0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
11THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
Cumulative wind power installations
A total of 141.6 GW is now installed in the European Union due to a record growth of 9.7 % in 2015. Germany remains the EU country with the largest installed capacity, followed by Spain, the UK, France and Italy. Eleven other EU countries have over 1 GW of installed capacity: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Greece,
Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania and Sweden.
Four of the latter (Sweden, Denmark, Poland and Portugal), have more than 5 GW installed.
Onshore and offshore annual markets
New offshore wind installations more than doubled in 2015 compared to 2014, with 3,034.5 MW of new gross capacity grid-connected. Offshore wind power installations represented 24% of the annual EU wind energy market, up from 13% in 2014.
FIGURE 11: ANNUAL ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE INSTALLATIONS (MW)
4,377
5,743
5,186
5,749
6,454
7,097
8,6328,115
9,706
9,0068,877
10,892
9,900
10,591
9,766
51
170
276
9090
93
318373
582883
866
1,175
1,5671,447 3,035
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Onshore Offshore
FIGURE 12: CUMULATIVE WIND POWER INSTALLATIONS IN THE EU (GW)
12.917.3
23.128.5
34.4 40.848.0
56.765.1
75.385.1
94.5106.5
117.4129.1
141.6
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
12
WIND IN POWER: 2015 EUROPEAN STATISTICS
THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION12
FIGURE 13: EU MEMBER STATE MARKET SHARES FOR TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY (GW). TOTAL 141.6 GW
Germany (44.9 GW) and Spain (23 GW) have the largest cumulative installed wind energy capacity in Europe. Together they represent 48% of total EU capacity. The UK, France and Italy follow with 13.6 GW (9.6% of total EU capacity), 10.4 GW (7.3%) and 9 GW (6.3%) respectively.
Thanks to this record year in annual installations, Poland, with 5.1 GW (3.6% of cumulative capacity), is now the seventh country per capacity installed, having overtaken Denmark and Portugal.
44.9
23
13.6
10.4 9
6 5.1 5.1 5.1 3.43 2.5 2.4 2.2 2.2
1 0.7 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.10.003
0.0030
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
Germany
Spain
UK
France
Italy
Sweden
Poland
Portugal
Denmark
Netherlands
Romania
Ireland
Austria
Belgium
Greece
Finland
Bulgaria
Lithuania
Croatia
Hungary
Estonia
Czech Republic
Cyprus
Latvia
Luxem-bourg
Slovenia
Slovakia
The wind energy capacity currently installed in the EU would produce in an average wind year 315 TWh of electricity, enough to cover 11.4% of the EU’s total electricity consumption1.
1 Wind energy penetration levels are calculated using average capacity factors onshore and offshore and Eurostat electricity con-sumption figures (2013). Consequently, table 1 indicates the approximate share of consumption met by the installed wind energy capacity at the end of 2015. The figure does not represent real wind energy production over a calendar year. The most recent data (2013) for EU28 final energy consumption of electricity from Eurostat, is 2,770 TWh. Eurostat, online table code [nrg_105a], extracted on 26 January 2016.
Wind power penetration
Total EU electricity
consumption (TWh)
Onshore wind energy production
(TWh)
Offshore wind energy production
(TWh)
Wind energy production
(TWh)
Share of EU consumption
met by onshore wind (TWh)
Share of EU consumption
met by offshore wind
Share of EU consumption met by wind
energy
2,770 274.5 40.6 315 9.9% 1.5% 11.4%
13THE EUROPEAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION
FIGURE 14: TOTAL ANNUAL INVESTMENTS IN WIND ENERGY 2010–2015. FIGURES INCLUDE INVESTMENTS IN NEW ASSETS (€ BN)
2015 was a record year for investments in the wind energy sector. Financial commitments in new assets reached a total of €26.4 billion (bn), a 40% increase from 2014. While investments in new onshore wind
generating assets increased by 6.3% in 2015, those in the offshore wind sector doubled compared to the previous year. In total, 9.7 GW of new gross capacity was financed.
The UK had the highest level of investments in 2015, attracting €12.6 bn for the construction of new onshore and offshore wind farms. This accounts for 48% of the total investments made in 2015.
66.7% of the new financial commitments in 2015 for renewable energies went to the wind power sector, followed by solar PV (15%), biomass (6%) and geothermal technologies (4%).
Investment highlights: trends and developments in 2015
FIGURE 15: INVESTMENTS IN THE WIND ENERGY SECTOR IN 2015.
FIGURES INCLUDE INVESTMENTS IN NEW ASSETS (€ MILLION) FIGURE 16: CLEAN ENERGY INVESTMENTS IN 2015 (€ MILLION)
1,260
483
513
557
648
822
915
918
949
1,388
5,323
12,598
- 2,000 6,000 10,000 14,000
Others
Austria
Ireland
Sweden
Poland
Turkey
Italy
Belgium
Finland
France
Germany
UK
Offshore Wind13,251
34%
Onshore Wind 13,121 33%
Solar PV5,872 15%
Biomass2,4666%
Geothermal1,3664%
Hydro9002%
Biogas8602%
Biofuels8012%
Other renewables6422%
-23%
-8%24%
30%40%
-
5
10
15
20
25
30
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Onshore Wind Offshore Wind
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