The same amount of megawatts as it takes to power it for a second, a minute, an hour, or a year. A watt, or a megawatt (million watts), is a unit of power, not of energy.
A standard power station produces something like 500 megawatts. A standard wind turbine produces about 5 megawatts.
From a few watts as in your cycle dynamo, to tens of megawatts for a power station.
1 MW = 10 to the power 6 Watts (in the new wiki answers type face).
100 mega watts
A typical utility scale wind turbine will produce anywhere from 1.5 megawatts to 3.0 megawatts. This means that a single wind turbine can power about 300 average households annually.
Nothing.
3,000,000
The nuclear power plant generates 50 megawatts of power.
A standard power station produces something like 500 megawatts. A standard wind turbine produces about 5 megawatts.
760,000 megawatts
435000 megawatts.
That is not fixed but you can estimate the usage as 1 kW per person, so that a power station of 500 Megawatts could supply a population of 500,000 people.
From a few watts as in your cycle dynamo, to tens of megawatts for a power station.
In 2012 the annual global solar energy production topped 100 000 Megawatts. That is 274 Megawatts a day. At peak power that is the equivalent of 100 large nuclear power plants.
63,000 Megawatts.
Microwatts, Milliwatts, Watts, Kilowatts, Megawatts, Joules.
1100 Megawatts