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521-POWER-Workshop

URJC

Created on April 7, 2026

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Transcript

5.2.1

Presentation rehearsal

Final integrated campaign development

Module: M5 | Type: Workshop

This publicactuin has been funded by the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union under the project POWER - Prevention Of Weaponization and Enhancing Resilience against Security-related Disinformation on Clean Energy (Reference: 2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

Introduction

Now that you know the main clean energy sources and supporting technologies, it is time to see how they work in practice. In this interactive session, you will explore real energy generation data from the four POWER partner countries and their neighbours: Romania, Spain, Malta, and Moldova. By comparing national energy mixes, you will discover how geography, policy, and history shape each country's energy profile — and begin to understand why certain technologies become targets for disinformation campaigns.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

OER Learning Objectives

By the end of this lecture, you will be able to:

Read and interpret real energy generation data from Eurostat and IRENA sources.

Compare the energy mixes of Romania, Spain, Malta, and Moldova, identifying the role of each clean energy source.

Analyse how geographical, economic, and policy factors shape national energy profiles.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

Subtítulo

01

What is an energy mix?

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

04

Dataviz: Energy mixes compared

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

02

What is an energy mix?

Subtítulo
Subtítulo

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook Tone: Bold, focused, attention‑grabbing. Use one of these: A striking data point A short real‑world story A surprising contradiction A tension the audience immediately recognises

Define the Problem Clearly Tone: Analytical, factual, grounded. Explain: What harmful narrative exists Why it matters Who is affected What the consequences are Keep it tight, concrete, and evidence‑based.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

02

What is an energy mix?

Subtítulo
Subtítulo

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook Tone: Bold, focused, attention‑grabbing. Use one of these: A striking data point A short real‑world story A surprising contradiction A tension the audience immediately recognises

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

02

What is an energy mix?

Subtítulo
Subtítulo

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

02

What is an energy mix?

Subtítulo
Subtítulo

Start With a Sharp Hook

Start With a Sharp Hook

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

02

What is an energy mix?

Start With a Sharp Hook

Subtítulo

Explain: The new frame The core idea The emotional value The cognitive value This is the heart of the pitch — keep it simple and memorable.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

Well

Done

POWERInformation that drives the energy of tomorrow

power.ciberimaginario.es

This publicactuin has been funded by the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union under the project POWER - Prevention Of Weaponization and Enhancing Resilience against Security-related Disinformation on Clean Energy (Reference: 2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.

POWER Project [2024-1-RO01-KA220-HED-000245038]

Energy mix vs electricity mix: It is important to distinguish between the overall energy mix and the electricity mix. The overall energy mix (or primary energy supply) includes all forms of energy a country consumes — for electricity, heating, transport, and industrial processes. This is measured in tonnes of oil equivalent (toe) or joules, and typically includes large shares of petroleum products (for transport) and natural gas (for heating), which do not appear prominently in the electricity mix. The electricity mix, by contrast, focuses specifically on how a country generates its electrical power — and this is where renewables like wind, solar, and hydro are most visible. When we say "Spain gets 59.7% of its electricity from renewables," we are talking about the electricity mix, not total energy. The total renewable share in Spain's overall energy consumption is lower (around 25%), because transport and heating still rely heavily on fossil fuels.

This Open Educational Resource (OER) has been developed as part of the POWER Project educational platform. This interactive session builds directly on the lecture on Clean Energy Technologies (2.1.1) by putting theory into practice: you will explore real energy generation data from the POWER partner countries — Romania, Spain, Malta, and Moldova — using interactive visualisations based on Eurostat and IRENA open data. By comparing how each country generates its electricity, you will understand the different energy profiles across Europe, identify which clean energy technologies play the largest role in each national context, and discuss which technologies are most vulnerable to disinformation campaigns and why. This resource is designed for both guided classroom use and autonomous online exploration.

Main learning questions addressed:

  • What does the energy mix of Romania, Spain, Malta, and Moldova look like, and how do they differ?
  • Which clean energy sources dominate in each country, and what geographical or policy factors explain these differences?
  • How has the share of renewables evolved over the past decade in each country?
  • Which clean energy technologies are most targeted by disinformation, and why might their role in the national mix make them more vulnerable?

Energy mix vs electricity mix: It is important to distinguish between the overall energy mix and the electricity mix. The overall energy mix (or primary energy supply) includes all forms of energy a country consumes — for electricity, heating, transport, and industrial processes. This is measured in tonnes of oil equivalent (toe) or joules, and typically includes large shares of petroleum products (for transport) and natural gas (for heating), which do not appear prominently in the electricity mix. The electricity mix, by contrast, focuses specifically on how a country generates its electrical power — and this is where renewables like wind, solar, and hydro are most visible. When we say "Spain gets 59.7% of its electricity from renewables," we are talking about the electricity mix, not total energy. The total renewable share in Spain's overall energy consumption is lower (around 25%), because transport and heating still rely heavily on fossil fuels.