Convert Kilowatts to Gigawatts - Power Converter
This tool converts a value in kilowatts (kW) to gigawatts (GW). The relationship between these units is fixed by SI prefixes so the mathematical conversion is exact: 1 kW equals 1×10^-6 GW.
Use this converter for engineering estimates, grid-scale comparisons, equipment specifications, and reporting. Note that the converter returns a numeric unit conversion only and does not include instrument measurement uncertainty or safety guidance for working on electrical systems.
Governance
Record cbf75d765d73 • Reviewed by Fidamen Standards Committee
Interactive Converter
Convert between kilowatt and gigawatt with precision rounding.
Quick reference table
| Kilowatt | Gigawatt |
|---|---|
| 1 kW | 0 GW |
| 5 kW | 0 GW |
| 10 kW | 0 GW |
| 25 kW | 0 GW |
| 50 kW | 0 GW |
| 100 kW | 0 GW |
Methodology
The conversion is based on SI prefix scaling. A kilowatt is 10^3 watts and a gigawatt is 10^9 watts, therefore the factor between kW and GW is 10^-6.
When applied to measured values, users should account for measurement uncertainty, instrument calibration, and traceability to national standards. Follow NIST guidance for SI unit usage and traceability, ISO guidance for measurement management, and relevant IEEE calibration and instrumentation standards when reporting or certifying measurements.
This converter provides the exact arithmetic transformation only. For compliance, include instrument uncertainty, calibration certificates, and safety procedures required by regulatory guidance such as OSHA when measurements are taken in the field or near live electrical equipment.
Key takeaways
This converter applies a fixed SI scaling factor: multiply kilowatts by 1e-6 to get gigawatts. The arithmetic conversion is exact, but when converting measured values include calibration, traceability, and uncertainty in your reporting.
For regulated reporting or safety-critical work, follow NIST guidance for units, ISO management and measurement standards for uncertainty and calibration, and IEEE/OSHA guidance for safe measurement practices.
Worked examples
1 kW = 0.000001 GW
1,000,000 kW = 1 GW
1,500 kW = 0.0015 GW
0.75 kW = 0.00000075 GW
F.A.Q.
Is the kW to GW conversion exact?
Yes. The mathematical conversion using SI prefixes is exact (1 kW = 1×10^-6 GW). If you are converting a measured value, include instrument uncertainty and calibration status in your final reported number.
How many decimal places should I use?
Choose decimal places based on the precision of your source value and the number of significant figures required by your application or reporting standard. For measured data, round after accounting for measurement uncertainty and calibration limits.
What is the difference between kW and kWh?
kW is a unit of power, describing a rate of energy transfer. kWh is a unit of energy, equal to one kilowatt of power delivered for one hour. This converter translates power units only.
When should I express power in GW instead of kW?
Use GW for very large power values such as entire-grid capacity, large power plants, or national-scale energy statistics. Use kW for individual equipment, small generators, or building-level loads.
How do I verify the accuracy of a measured kW value before converting?
Verify instrument calibration against traceable standards, review the instrument’s uncertainty budget, and follow calibration procedures recommended by NIST, ISO management system guidance, and relevant IEEE standards. Keep calibration certificates and document measurement conditions.
Sources & citations
- NIST Special Publication 811, Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI) — https://www.nist.gov/pml/special-publication-811
- ISO Standards for Quantities and Units (ISO 80000 series) — https://www.iso.org/standard/54564.html
- IEEE Standards and Guidelines for Measurement and Instrumentation — https://standards.ieee.org
- OSHA Electrical Safety and Work Practices — https://www.osha.gov/electrical
Further resources
Versioning & Change Control
Audit record (versions, QA runs, reviewer sign-off, and evidence).
Record ID: cbf75d765d73What changed (latest)
v1.0.0 • 2025-11-21 • MINOR
Initial publication and governance baseline.
Why: Published with reviewed formulas, unit definitions, and UX controls.
Public QA status
PASS — golden 25 + edge 120
Last run: 2026-01-23 • Run: golden-edge-2026-01-23
Versioning & Change Control
Audit record (versions, QA runs, reviewer sign-off, and evidence).
What changed (latest)
v1.0.0 • 2025-11-21 • MINOR
Initial publication and governance baseline.
Why: Published with reviewed formulas, unit definitions, and UX controls.
Public QA status
PASS — golden 25 + edge 120
Last run: 2026-01-23 • Run: golden-edge-2026-01-23
Engine
v1.0.0
Data
Baseline (no external datasets)
Content
v1.0.0
UI
v1.0.0
Governance
Last updated: Nov 21, 2025
Reviewed by: Fidamen Standards Committee (Review board)
Credentials: Internal QA
Risk level: low
Reviewer profile (entity)
Fidamen Standards Committee
Review board
Internal QA
Entity ID: https://fidamen.com/reviewers/fidamen-standards-committee#person
Semantic versioning
- MAJOR: Calculation outputs can change for the same inputs (formula, rounding policy, assumptions).
- MINOR: New features or fields that do not change existing outputs for the same inputs.
- PATCH: Bug fixes, copy edits, or accessibility changes that do not change intended outputs except for previously incorrect cases.
Review protocol
- Verify formulas and unit definitions against primary standards or datasets.
- Run golden-case regression suite and edge-case suite.
- Record reviewer sign-off with credentials and scope.
- Document assumptions, limitations, and jurisdiction applicability.
Assumptions & limitations
- Uses exact unit definitions from the Fidamen conversion library.
- Internal calculations use double precision; display rounding follows the unit's configured decimal places.
- Not a substitute for calibrated instruments in regulated contexts.
- Jurisdiction-specific rules may require official guidance.
Change log
v1.0.0 • 2025-11-21 • MINOR
Initial publication and governance baseline.
Why: Published with reviewed formulas, unit definitions, and UX controls.
Areas: engine, content, ui • Reviewer: Fidamen Standards Committee • Entry ID: 1c52df20fb37
