Denmark just completed the most ambitious urban solar program in European history — every rooftop in Copenhagen now generates clean electricity, making the Danish capital a net electricity exporter that sells surplus power to Sweden and Germany while powering itself entirely from rooftop sun.
The Copenhagen Solar Capital Initiative covered 94,000 rooftops across the city's 99 square kilometers with bifacial solar panels over four years, adding 1.8 gigawatts of distributed capacity to a city previously dependent on centralized generation from offshore wind. Copenhagen's latitude at 55 degrees north provides 1,750 annual sunshine hours — modest by global standards — but the sheer density and area of urban rooftop coverage compensates through scale, with city-wide panel area of 47 square kilometers generating electricity equivalent to a medium-sized offshore wind farm. Building-integrated battery storage at each property provides 8 hours of demand coverage, ensuring continued supply through low-generation periods without requiring grid upgrades.
Copenhagen's electricity demand reaches 900 megawatts during peak summer daytime hours. The 1.8 gigawatts of rooftop solar generates 2.1 gigawatts on clear midsummer days, leaving 1.2 gigawatts of surplus exported across Oresund interconnectors to Sweden's grid and through the Great Belt cable to German power markets. Export revenue funds the program's remaining installation costs and creates net positive cash flow for Copenhagen's municipality by the third year of operation.
Copenhagen becomes the first European capital where electricity bills for residential customers have turned net positive — households receive monthly payments for electricity exported rather than paying for consumption.
Source: Copenhagen Municipality Energy Department, Energinet Denmark, Danish Energy Regulatory Authority, 2025