FIGURE 20. Total new onshore wind power capacity in Europe 2026-30
In Turkiye, energy independence is still a political priority, and wind energy enjoys strong government support. In 2025 the Government announced a Super Permit law which, regulatory reforms, is expected to cut the preliminary months. The Government has also announced major investments in the electricity transmission network. capacity by 2030, bringing total installed onshore capacity to just over 26 GW. The country targets 120 GW of combined The Labour Government, in office since 2024, moved swiftly to reform onshore wind policy. It lifted the de facto ban on onshore wind in England that had been in place since 2015. bringing Government, industry, regulators and other stakeholders together to accelerate deployment. Projects (NSIPs), allowing them to benefit from a centralised and expedited permitting process. Rules were also amended In 2025, Germany permitted 20.8 GW of new onshore wind projects, up from 14.1 GW in 2024 and 7.6 GW in 2023. renewable energy auctions as of Allocation Round 7. Transport permits, a bottleneck in recent years, are now also by 2030, cementing its position as Europe's largest onshore capacity over the next five years, bringing total installed installed capacity of the second-largest market, Spain. Germany also revised its onshore wind auction schedule. In capacity to 23 GW by 2030. This would still fall short of the 2025, the 14.4 GW awarded exceeded the originally planned volume of 10 GW. And for 2026 the Government has already the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG 2023) is 115 GW.