IEA: Renewables will be world’s top power source ‘by 2026’

Renewable energy will overtake coal to become the world’s top source of electricity “by 2026 at the latest”, according to new forecasts from the International Energy Agency (IEA).

CB_IEA_Renewables
The global electricity mix is shifting fast – with wind and solar set to drive nearly all demand growth and renewables poised to overtake coal by 2026. Image: James Whately, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Unsplash.

The rise of renewables is being driven by extremely rapid growth in wind and solar output, which topped 4,000 terawatt hours (TWh) in 2024 and will pass 6,000TWh by 2026.

Wind and solar are increasingly under attack from populist politicians on the right, such as US president Donald Trump and Reform in the UK.

Nevertheless, they will together meet more than 90 per cent of the increase in global electricity demand out to 2026, the IEA says, while modest growth for hydro power will add to renewables’ rise.

With nuclear and gas also reaching record highs by 2026, coal-fired generation is set to decline – driven by falls in China and the EU – meaning that power-sector emissions will decline, too.

The chart below illustrates these profound shifts in the global electricity mix – in particular, the meteoric rise of renewables, driven by wind and solar.

CB_IEA_Reneables_1

Global electricity generation by source, terawatt hours, 1990-2026. Figures for 2025 and 2026 are projections. Renewables include wind, solar, hydro, bioenergy and geothermal. Source: IEA electricity mid-year update 2025.

The IEA says that renewables could overtake coal as early as this year, depending on weather-related impacts on the output of wind and hydro capacity.

It adds that the switch will happen by 2026 “at the latest”, when renewables are expected to make up 36 per cent of global power supplies, against just 32 per cent from coal – the fuel’s lowest share in a century.

The share of global electricity generation coming from wind and solar combined will rise from 1 per cent in 2005 and 4 per cent in 2015 to 15 per cent in 2024, 17 per cent in 2025 and nearly 20 per cent in 2026.

The global reduction in coal-fired electricity generation will result from declines in China and the EU, which will only be partially offset by increases in the US, India and other Asian nations.

The IEA attributes the coming decline of coal to “continued renewables growth and higher coal-to-gas switching in multiple regions”. It says gas power will rise by 1.3 per cent this year and next.

For nuclear, the IEA says that the new record output will result from plant restarts in Japan, “robust” output in France and the US, as well as new reactors in China, India and South Korea.

The shift to wind and solar is happening despite global electricity demand being forecast to grow much faster over the next two years – at 3.3 per cent and 3.7 per cent, respectively – than the 2.6 per cent average for 2015-2023.

The IEA says new demand is coming from industry, domestic appliances, growing use of air conditioning, ongoing electrification of heat and transport, as well as the expansion of data centres.

This story was published with permission from Carbon Brief.

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