TL;DR
For the first time, low-emissions energy sources met all new global electricity demand in 2025, leaving no room for fossil fuels. Solar power accounted for three-quarters of the new demand, with wind power covering most of the rest.
Low-emissions energy sources met all new global electricity demand for the first time last year, leaving no room for fossil fuels to grow, the energy think tank Ember has found.
Solar power led the charge, meeting three-quarters of the 849 TWh in new demand. Wind power met almost all the rest.
All low-emissions sources, which also include biofuels – generated from decaying agricultural and food waste – hydro-electricity and nuclear power, provided a record 42.6 percent of the 31,779 TWh of electricity the world consumed in 2025, said Ember.
Fossil fuels provided the majority, but Ember believes 2025 marked a turning point after which their share will shrink.
“Clean power deployment is now at such a high level that it can structurally meet the increase in demand,” Ember’s senior energy and climate data analyst Nicolas Fulghum told Al Jazeera. “In the next few years, we expect it to meet all the growth in electricity demand and start to push for a decline in fossil generation.”
By about 2035, Ember expects fossil fuels’ share of the electricity market to have dropped by 10-20 percent, losing its market dominance to clean energy.
Not everyone is convinced.
“In an average year, if clean resources are sufficient to meet extra demand for electricity, that doesn’t establish that this is going to be a permanent state,” said Rahmat Poudineh, head of electricity research at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES).
“If you want to establish a trend, it needs to prove in extreme conditions, in cold winters, hot summers, because the system is designed to meet peak demand, not average demand,” he told Al Jazeera.
Ember said 2025 was not a year of extreme demand growth – 2.8 percent, in line with the average during the past decade.
It acknowledged, too, that it expected 2024 to be the turning point, but a summer of record heat drove enormous demand for air conditioning, allowing fossil fuels to grow as well as renewables.
Ember, however, pointed out that the world has outperformed expectations as it rises to meet an unprecedented set of energy challenges.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, for example, led to annual 5 percent increases in the rollout of renewable energy in Europe.
That meant Europe produced 71 percent of its electricity from clean sources last year.
Others seem to be following suit.
Last year’s global tipping point was reached because China and India – two of the world’s biggest emitters – scaled back fossil-generated electricity, the first time this century they have done so together.
The International Energy Agency, an intergovernmental think tank, also found on Monday that oil and gas demand slowed in 2025 compared with 2024 – not just in electricity generation but in the overall energy mix.
The current war threatening the Gulf may further lower demand for fossil fuels, if governments heed the International Monetary Fund’s advice to shield only the most vulnerable households from price rises or risk inflation.