Renewables provided record 32% of global electricity in 2024: Report
- Clean energy accounted for 40.9% of global electricity generation in 2024, marking the first time since the 1940s that it crossed the 40% threshold, according to Ember's report.
- In 2024, electricity demand was 30,856 TWh globally, with clean energy meeting over three-quarters of this increase in demand, as stated by Ember.
- In the U.S., clean energy made up 42% of electricity generation, with solar contributing significantly to this growth, according to Ember.
89 Articles
89 Articles
Continued global solar boom – "unstoppable force"
Solar energy worldwide has doubled in three years and continues to grow at a breakneck pace. For the first time since the 1940s, more than four-tenths of our electricity production is now fossil-free, according to a new report by think tank Ember.
Nearly 41% of global power came from clean energy last year
Clean energy accounted for nearly 41% of the world’s electricity in 2024.Ember released a report on Tuesday that found 40.9% of global electricity generation last year came from clean energy. Last year marked the "first time since the 1940s" that clean energy’s share of global power generation crossed the 40% threshold, according to the energy think tank.Among green energy sources, hydro was responsible for 14.3% of global electricity. Behind th…
Solar and wind helped clean energy supply 40% of the world’s electricity in 2024
Clean energy sources provided more than 40% of global electricity in 2024, driven by a record surge in solar power that has more than doubled in capacity in just three years.Jillian Ambrose reports for The Guardian.In short:Solar power accounted for nearly 7% of global electricity last year, while wind contributed just over 8%, both still trailing hydropower’s 14% share.A report by Ember found clean energy is now growing faster than global elect…
Clean energy provided record share of electricity in 2024
The NewsClean energy provided more than 40% of global electricity in 2024, a record. Solar’s rapid growth drove the increase — it accounts for 7% of the world’s power — although it was still dwarfed in overall contribution by hydropower, at 14%. Nuclear, wind, and bioenergy account for most of the rest. Research by the think tank Ember suggested that clean power’s expansion will outpace growth in electricity demand. That ought to mean fossil fue…
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