Watts (W) to Megawatts (MW) Conversion
Watts
The watt (W) is the SI derived unit of power, defined as one joule per second (J/s = kg·m²·s⁻³), representing the rate of energy transfer or conversion. Named after Scottish engineer James Watt, whose steam engine improvements launched the Industrial Revolution, the watt is the coherent unit for all forms of power — mechanical, electrical, thermal, and acoustic. A human at rest produces about 80 W of thermal power; a professional cyclist sustains approximately 400 W during a race; a lightning bolt peaks at around 10¹² W for microseconds.
Megawatts
The megawatt (MW) is a unit of power equal to exactly 1,000,000 watts (1,000 kW), the standard scale for power plant output and large industrial consumers. A large wind turbine generates 2–15 MW; a typical nuclear reactor unit produces 1,000–1,600 MW (1–1.6 GW); a small hydroelectric dam might produce 10–100 MW. Data centres for large cloud providers can consume 100–500 MW of continuous power.
| Watts (W) | Megawatts (MW) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 W | 0.0000001 MW |
| 1 W | 0.000001 MW |
| 2 W | 0.000002 MW |
| 3 W | 0.000003 MW |
| 5 W | 0.000005 MW |
| 10 W | 0.00001 MW |
| 20 W | 0.00002 MW |
| 30 W | 0.00003 MW |
| 50 W | 0.00005 MW |
| 100 W | 0.0001 MW |
| 1000 W | 0.001 MW |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How many megawatts are in 1 watts?
1 watts (W) is exactly 0.000001 megawatts (MW).
How do I convert watts to megawatts?
Multiply the value in watts by 0.000001 to get the result in megawatts. Or use the converter above — type any number and see the result instantly.