LONDON ¨C Renewable power made up almost 50% of the world¡¯s electricity capacity last year after a record increase in solar installations, data from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) shared on Tuesday showed.
With the conflict in the Middle East having led to record monthly gains on oil ?markets, ?some in industry have lobbied for more investment in fossil fuels, but ?countries with higher renewable capacity have been insulated from the market shock, some analysts say.
¡°The Middle East crisis has, in some ways confirmed dramatically energy security is not something we can ?be sure of with fossil fuels,¡± IRENA Director-General Francesco La Camera.
Global renewable power capacity reached a ?record 5,149 gigawatts at the end of 2025, up by 692 GW from 2024, the data showed.
The growth was led by a leap ?in solar capacity, which grew by ?511 GW in 2025 to 2,392 GW, confirming its position as the world¡¯s largest renewable source.
The figures are far greater than the ?116 GW growth in ?fossil fuel power capacity and took the share of renewables ?in global electricity capacity to 49.4% in 2025, up from 46.3% the year before, ?the data ?showed.
More than 100 countries at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai in 2023 agreed to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030 as part of efforts to meet global climate targets and La Camera said last year¡¯s additions mean the sector is closer ?to reaching the target.
¡°This 700 gigawatts means that we may be quite close in 2030 to the tripling target, not exactly the triple, but very close to it,¡± he said.
The data shows the annual growth rate in renewable capacity in 2025 rose to 15.5% compared with a growth rate ?of ?around 15.1% in 2024.
Renewable groups last year said meeting the target by ?2030 would require annual growth of 16.6% from 2025-30.
New wind energy installations were 159 GW, taking ?the total installed capacity to 1,291 GW.
Capacity is a measure of the amount of power plants are able to produce but they often generate less than capacity if they are taken offline for reasons such as maintenance or refuelling, or in the case ?of renewables, during low wind and sun periods.
Data from think tank Ember last year showed renewable energy sources generated more electricity than coal globally for the first time in the first half of 2025. In all, renewables provided 34% of global electricity.
It has yet to publish its full-year data for 2025.
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