Solar growth in China and India powers clean energy surge by 2025

Category: (Self-Study) Science/Environment

Storyline

Hide Storyline

Record growth in solar, especially in China and India, was a driving factor for clean energy sources surpassing the world’s strong demand for electricity in 2025, according to a new global power analysis.

Clean power generation grew 887 terawatt hours last year, exceeding overall global electricity demand growth of 849 terawatt hours, according to a report by energy think tank Ember.

Ember analyzes electricity data from 215 countries, and studied 2025 data for 91 countries, which the firm says represents 93% of global demand.

Overall, the share of renewables—including solar, wind, hydropower, and other clean energies—hit more than one-third of the world’s electricity mix for the first time in modern history last year, growing 33.8% to 10,730 terawatt hours.

It’s promising news for a world embattled by climate change that’s driven by the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and gas to meet growing needs from economic growth, rising populations, and electrification. The analysis is also especially timely amid a global energy crisis exacerbated by the U.S. war in Iran.

In another historical first, coal power saw its share fall below one-third of global generation, dropping 0.6% to 63 terawatt hours.

“We’re coming from a period over the last few decades where new electricity demand growth meant growth in fossil generation,” said Nicolas Fulghum, Ember senior data analyst and lead author of the report. “We’re now moving into a world where that’s no longer the case.”

Solar, which grew 30% in 2025, alone met three-quarters of last year’s net rise in electricity demand—and combined with wind power generation, met 99% of it.

Though solar overtook wind power globally for the first time last year, and gained on nuclear power, Ember expects the two to overtake nuclear this year.

Meanwhile, fossil fuel generation essentially halted, and fell about 0.2% in 2025, or 38 terawatt hours—making last year one of only a handful of years without a rise this century.

This article and video were provided by The Associated Press.

Script

Hide Script

[Solar panels installed on rooftop of the manufacturing facility of Renew, one of India’s largest solar power companies]

Nicolas Fulghum (interview): “In 2025, clean power met all of the increase in global electricity demand, and this was led by solar power, which showed a 30% increase over output in the previous year. That was the fastest increase in solar power that we’ve seen in eight years, so a massive expansion in solar generation.”

[Processing of solar cells by automated machines]

Nicolas Fulghum (interview): “The largest drivers of global fossil generation growth, like China and India, are now aggressively pursuing a strategy of diversification through bringing renewables into the mix. And those are the sources that are the biggest drivers of change in that power system today.”

[Solar and wind energy farm]

Nicolas Fulghum (interview): “We’re coming from a period over the last few decades where new electricity demand growth meant growth in fossil generation. We’re now moving into a world where that’s no longer the case, and that added demand can predominantly be met by clean power sources.”

[Solar panels on slopes]

Nicolas Fulghum (interview): “We’ve also hit a new milestone in 2025, where renewables have now risen to the level where they’ve overtaken coal generation for the first time in the modern power system. Coal generation actually fell below a third of global electricity generation for the first time in history as well. And this is all thanks to the recent expansion of solar power and wind power in the global electricity system.”

[American Electric Power’s John Amos coal-fired plant in Winfield, West Virginia]

[Mountaineer Power Plant, a coal-fired power plant owned by American Electric Power (AEP), seen across the Ohio River]

[Solar panels installed on rooftops of houses]

[Karachi resident Mohammad Yameen Qureshi getting a solar system installed on the rooftop of his house]

[Worker using pliers to install solar panels]

Nicolas Fulghum (interview): “The big difference to 10, 15 years ago where governments were pledging a build out of renewables is that now those pledges are much more believable. The drive towards renewables is no longer just founded on policy commitments and government policy, it is founded on an economic viability of those generating sources as they’re competitive and cheaper than their fossil fuel alternatives. And that really changes the dynamic in the energy transition where we’re moving from a heavily policy supported environment to one that can move by itself and has momentum behind it.”

[Solar market, where panels are getting unloaded from vehicle]

[Shop keeper cleaning solar panels in the shop]

[Solar panel]

This script was provided by The Associated Press.