Renewables reached nearly 50% of global electricity capacity last year
by Growtika on 4/2/2026, 3:26:18 PM
https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/01/renewables_generated_nearly_half_global_power/
Comments
by: philipkglass
It takes time for statistical agencies to compile reports. I haven't yet found reports covering the growth in renewable <i>generation</i> (actual terawatt hours) for all of 2025. But this covers 3 quarters of the year:<p><a href="https://ember-energy.org/latest-updates/solar-and-wind-growth-meets-all-new-electricity-demand-in-the-first-three-quarters-of-2025/" rel="nofollow">https://ember-energy.org/latest-updates/solar-and-wind-growt...</a><p><i>In the first three quarters of 2025, solar generation rose by 498 TWh (+31%) and already surpassed the total solar output in all of 2024. Wind generation grew by 137 TWh (+7.6%). Together, they added 635 TWh, outpacing the rise in global electricity demand of 603 TWh (+2.7%).</i>
4/2/2026, 5:44:52 PM
by: cbmuser
Capacity doesn’t matter, generation does.
4/2/2026, 5:04:10 PM
by: Ancalagon
Wait this is actually amazing, I had no idea it was that high. I can’t even believe what the US admin is doing, this is clearly the winning technology.
4/2/2026, 4:22:31 PM
by: pzo
worth to keep in mind electricity usage != energy usage. We are far away from replacing oil, lpg.
4/2/2026, 6:06:32 PM
by: Night_Thastus
Makes sense - solar especially. It's just more financially smart to buy something that will generate electricity for 20-30 years with little to no maintenance than a plant that requires constant fuel, and is fairly complex mechanically with fluids and heat exchangers and turbines and so on. Panel efficiency keeps going up and prices keep going down, it's a snowball at this point.
4/2/2026, 4:27:14 PM
by: mentalgear
This is far higher than I expected: a much needed, remarkably good reason to be cheerful about the future after all !
4/2/2026, 5:24:17 PM
by: lifty
Solar capacity is always misleading because it’s intermittent. Capacity of a gas power plant can’t be compared to capacity of a solar power plant, even though it sounds like you are comparing the same thing. Would love to know total kWh generated.
4/2/2026, 4:40:51 PM
by: ashutoshmishr88
curious how this scales with larger datasets. anyone tried it in production?
4/2/2026, 5:30:17 PM
by: toomuchtodo
Report: <a href="https://www.irena.org/Publications/2026/Mar/Renewable-capacity-statistics-2026" rel="nofollow">https://www.irena.org/Publications/2026/Mar/Renewable-capaci...</a>
4/2/2026, 4:18:37 PM
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4/2/2026, 3:38:53 PM