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Renewables Beat Coal for First Time Since 1919

Renewables Beat Coal for First Time Since 1919

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Key Takeaways

  • Renewables generated 33.8% of global electricity in 2025, surpassing coal for the first time since 1919.
  • Coal’s share of the global power mix fell to 33.0% as solar and wind deployment accelerated worldwide.
  • Fossil fuels still generated more electricity overall when gas and other fossil sources are included.

For most of the last century, coal was the backbone of global electricity generation.

But in 2025, renewables reclaimed the lead for the first time since 1919, when hydropower briefly helped them generate a larger share of electricity before coal’s long rise to dominance.

Data from Ember shows renewables generated 33.8% of global electricity in 2025, narrowly surpassing coal at 33.0%. The shift was driven largely by rapid growth in solar and wind power across China, Europe, and the United States.

While coal once accounted for more than 40% of the global power mix, falling renewable energy costs and rising clean energy investment are steadily reshaping the world’s electricity system.

Solar and Wind Drive the Renewable Surge

In 2025, renewables accounted for 33.8% of global electricity generation, totaling 10,730 terawatt-hours (TWh). Coal generated 10,476 TWh, representing 33.0% of the global mix.

Falling costs for solar panels, battery storage, and wind turbines have made renewable electricity more competitive across major economies.

Governments have also increased investment in clean energy infrastructure as countries pursue emissions reduction targets.

Year Renewables (%) Coal (%) Gas and other fossil (%) Nuclear (%)
2025 33.8 33.0 24.4 8.9
2024 31.9 34.1 25.0 9.0
2023 30.3 35.0 25.5 9.1
2022 29.5 35.4 26.0 9.1
2021 28.1 35.9 26.2 9.8
2020 28.0 35.3 26.8 9.9
2019 26.1 36.6 27.1 10.3
2018 25.1 37.9 27.0 10.1
2017 24.5 38.0 27.4 10.2
2016 23.7 37.8 28.1 10.4
2015 23.0 38.7 27.8 10.6
2014 22.3 40.4 26.8 10.5
2013 21.7 40.7 27.0 10.6
2012 21.0 39.8 28.4 10.8
2011 20.0 40.6 27.6 11.9
2010 19.7 39.8 27.7 12.8
2009 19.5 39.9 27.3 13.3
2008 18.9 40.2 27.5 13.4
2007 18.0 40.8 27.5 13.7
2006 18.2 40.2 26.9 14.7
2005 18.1 39.5 27.4 15.0
2004 18.0 39.0 27.4 15.6
2003 17.4 39.5 27.4 15.6
2002 17.9 38.3 27.3 16.5
2001 18.0 38.0 27.1 16.9
2000 18.7 38.0 26.6 16.6
1999 19.1 37.0 26.9 17.0
1998 19.4 37.2 26.4 16.9
1997 19.8 37.5 25.8 17.0
1996 19.9 37.4 25.1 17.5
1995 20.3 36.8 25.5 17.4
1994 20.0 37.0 25.7 17.3
1993 20.2 36.9 25.6 17.3
1992 19.6 36.9 26.3 17.2
1991 19.7 36.6 26.6 17.2
1990 19.8 36.5 26.9 16.8
1989 19.4 37.7 26.3 16.6
1988 20.0 38.1 24.9 17.0
1987 20.1 38.4 25.1 16.3
1986 21.0 38.0 25.3 15.7
1985 21.2 38.0 25.7 15.1
1984 21.7 37.2 27.9 13.2
1983 22.1 37.7 28.6 11.5
1982 22.1 37.4 30.0 10.5
1981 21.7 36.8 31.7 9.8
1980 21.6 37.0 32.9 8.5
1979 21.8 35.9 34.3 8.0
1978 21.6 35.1 35.2 8.0
1977 21.1 36.1 35.6 7.3
1976 21.4 36.4 36.0 6.2
1975 23.0 35.6 35.6 5.8
1974 23.4 35.6 36.7 4.3
1973 21.7 37.3 37.7 3.3
1972 23.1 37.4 36.9 2.6
1971 23.8 39.0 35.1 2.1
1970 24.1 42.2 32.1 1.6
1969 24.7 45.0 28.9 1.4
1968 25.4 47.2 26.2 1.2
1967 26.4 48.1 24.4 1.1
1966 27.4 48.8 22.8 0.9
1965 27.6 50.8 21.0 0.7
1964 27.0 51.7 20.9 0.5
1963 28.3 52.1 19.2 0.4
1962 29.1 52.2 18.4 0.2
1961 30.0 52.2 17.6 0.2
1960 30.4 52.8 16.7 0.1
1959 30.5 53.4 16.1 0.1
1958 32.6 52.9 14.5 0.0
1957 31.1 54.9 14.0 0.0
1956 30.9 55.9 13.2 0.0
1955 31.2 55.3 13.5 0.0
1954 32.5 53.2 14.3 0.0
1953 33.0 52.3 14.7 0.0
1952 34.8 51.6 13.6 0.0
1951 35.2 52.5 12.3 0.0
1950 36.2 50.4 13.5 0.0
1949 36.6 50.6 12.8 0.0
1948 37.5 52.4 10.1 0.0
1947 38.6 51.7 9.7 0.0
1946 41.7 49.3 9.0 0.0
1945 40.3 51.7 8.0 0.0
1944 38.6 53.3 8.0 0.0
1943 38.3 54.6 7.2 0.0
1942 37.9 55.5 6.6 0.0
1941 37.8 55.8 6.4 0.0
1940 38.3 55.3 6.4 0.0
1939 39.0 53.9 7.1 0.0
1938 41.0 52.8 6.2 0.0
1937 41.6 52.2 6.2 0.0
1936 41.5 52.1 6.4 0.0
1935 43.8 50.3 5.9 0.0
1934 42.6 51.3 6.1 0.0
1933 44.7 49.1 6.2 0.0
1932 45.1 48.6 6.3 0.0
1931 42.2 51.1 6.7 0.0
1930 42.9 51.2 5.8 0.0
1929 42.5 51.9 5.6 0.0
1928 44.1 51.4 4.5 0.0
1927 43.1 52.7 4.2 0.0
1926 42.8 52.7 4.5 0.0
1925 41.1 54.2 4.6 0.0
1924 42.4 51.8 5.9 0.0
1923 42.8 52.4 4.8 0.0
1922 44.3 51.2 4.5 0.0
1921 44.6 51.0 4.4 0.0
1920 45.2 50.7 4.1 0.0
1919 51.7 47.6 0.7 0.0
1918 47.9 50.9 1.2 0.0
1917 42.4 55.8 1.8 0.0
1916 42.7 55.4 1.9 0.0
1915 42.4 55.7 1.9 0.0
1914 41.6 56.4 2.0 0.0
1913 42.2 55.7 2.1 0.0
1912 43.1 55.3 1.7 0.0
1911 42.2 56.1 1.7 0.0
1910 40.7 57.7 1.7 0.0
1909 39.9 58.5 1.6 0.0
1908 39.3 59.2 1.5 0.0
1907 37.5 61.1 1.5 0.0
1906 36.7 61.9 1.4 0.0
1905 35.8 63.0 1.2 0.0
1904 35.9 63.2 0.9 0.0
1903 37.0 62.5 0.6 0.0
1902 38.9 61.1 0.0 0.0
1901 40.3 59.7 0.0 0.0
1900 42.0 58.0 0.0 0.0

Renewables increased their share of global electricity generation by nearly 11 percentage points over the last decade, rising from 23.0% in 2015 to 33.8% in 2025.

Much of this growth came from utility-scale solar and wind projects, particularly in China, Europe, and the United States.

Hydropower remains an important contributor, but newer renewable technologies are now driving most of the expansion.

Coal’s Long Decline Continues

Coal dominated global electricity generation throughout much of the 20th century, peaking at more than 40% of the global mix during the 2000s. Its decline has been gradual but increasingly visible as cleaner energy sources gain market share.

In 2025, coal generation fell by 63 TWh, marking its first annual decline since the pandemic-driven slowdown in 2020.

Combined with rising electricity demand worldwide, coal’s share dropped below one-third of global generation for the first time ever.

Renewables had briefly surpassed coal once before in 1919, when hydropower represented a larger share of the electricity system. However, that lead was short-lived as industrial coal use rapidly expanded in the decades that followed.

The Global Power Mix Is Still Evolving

Despite the milestone, fossil fuels still account for a large share of global electricity generation.

Gas and other fossil sources made up 24.4% of the power mix in 2025, meaning fossil fuels collectively still generated more electricity than renewables.

At the same time, nuclear power’s share has gradually declined from its peak in the late 20th century.

Even after renewables surpassed coal, fossil fuels still generated more than half of global electricity in 2025 when gas and other fossil sources are included, highlighting how incomplete the global energy transition remains.

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