Renewables overtook coal in the power mix
In 2025 renewables generated about 33.8% of the world's electricity and overtook coal for the first time in roughly a century, with solar the fastest-growing source.
Electricity is the frontline of the clean-energy transition, and it just passed a milestone. In 2025 renewable sources — hydro, wind, solar and others — supplied about 33.8% of global electricity, edging past coal at 33.0% for the first time in about 100 years.
Solar is doing the heavy lifting
Solar power reached about 8.8% of global electricity in 2025, up roughly 30% in a single year, and has been the fastest-growing electricity source for two decades. Together, solar and wind supplied close to 99% of the growth in electricity demand in 2025, meaning almost all new demand was met without extra fossil generation.
What it does and does not mean
Crossing the renewables-over-coal line is symbolically large, but fossil fuels still generate the majority of electricity when gas is included, and total power-sector emissions are only just plateauing. The transition is happening fastest in the power sector; transport, heating and industry lag further behind.
For the first time in a century, the world made more electricity from renewables than from coal.
Why the power mix is a lead indicator
Because electricity is easier to decarbonise than most other sectors — and because electrifying cars, heat and industry shifts their emissions onto the grid — the cleanliness of electricity is a leading gauge of the whole transition. On that gauge, 2025 was a turning point.
- Ember, Global Electricity Review 2026.
- IEA electricity statistics.
- Energy Institute Statistical Review of World Energy 2025.
Key indicators
- Renewables 2025
- 33.8%
- Coal 2025
- 33.0%
- Solar share
- 8.8%
- Solar growth
- ~+30%/yr
- Solar+wind of demand growth
- ~99%
Renewables include
Hydropower, wind, solar, bioenergy and geothermal — hydro is still the largest single renewable.
Related
Growth is powered by record solar and wind capacity.