Close Menu
News Frame For You — Latest Updates on AI, Sports, Europe, Asia & Business
  • Home
  • AI
  • Asia
  • Business
  • Education
  • Europe
  • Life & Style
  • Sports
  • USA
  • Store

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

What's Hot

Consumer spending pushes US economy up 4.4% in third quarter, fastest in two years

January 22, 2026

Quadric rides the shift from cloud AI to on-device inference — and it’s paying off

January 22, 2026

Winter storms threaten broad section of US from New Mexico to New England

January 22, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
News Frame For You — Latest Updates on AI, Sports, Europe, Asia & Business
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Home
  • AI
  • Asia
  • Business
  • Education
  • Europe
  • Life & Style
  • Sports
  • USA
  • Store
News Frame For You — Latest Updates on AI, Sports, Europe, Asia & Business
Home » Renewables muscle fossil fuels out of EU electricity market, says research | Energy News
Europe

Renewables muscle fossil fuels out of EU electricity market, says research | Energy News

adminBy adminJanuary 22, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


Solar and wind power provided more electricity than coal and gas last year, leading a global trend, said think tank Ember.

Solar and wind power outperformed fossil fuels in the European Union for the first time last year, a new high watermark on Europe’s transition to green and autonomous energy.

The two sources of energy generated 30 percent of EU electricity, compared with 29 percent for coal and gas, Ember, a global energy think tank, said on Thursday in its European Electricity Review.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Report author Beatrice Petrovich said the “milestone moment” demonstrated Europe’s rapid transition away from greenhouse gas-emitting fuels.

If hydroelectricity and electricity generated from decaying agricultural and food waste, known as biomass, were to be added, the renewables’ share of the electricity market rose to 48 percent.

Nuclear power, which is emissions-free, generated another 23 percent of EU power.

What’s behind the solar power surge?

This positive tipping point for Europe was reached thanks to an annual one-fifth surge in solar power for four years running, partly driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its cutoff of pipeline gas to Europe.

Much of Europe’s transition has happened, not due to large investments in industrial-scale solar and wind farms, but thanks to rooftop photovoltaic panels installed on homes, Ember has said.

Recent research suggested that this is still an underused pathway to energy autonomy, and that rooftop solar panels can cover 40 percent of EU needs.

Solar and wind energy have been growing at record annual rates for 23 years according to the International Energy Agency, the world’s leading energy think tank, claiming an ever-growing share of the electricity market. Because the electricity market was growing as a whole, there was room for coal and gas use to grow as well. That has now changed, said Ember.

Last October, it was assessed that in 2025, solar and wind power outgrew the electricity market for the first time, and began to take market share away from fossil fuels worldwide.

This global transition away from fossil fuels manifested itself as a large, simultaneous drop in coal use in China and India last year, two of the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.

In China, coal-fired power fell by 1 percent, the first drop in a decade.

‘So much capacity being added’

Ember said solar power has grown in 14 of the EU’s 27 member states, but some industry insiders warned that too much ambition could backfire.

“In Greece, in 2025, we reached an installed capacity [of solar photovoltaics] of 12GW, up from 9.5GW in 2024, a 25 percent leap,” said Stelios Loumakis, president of the Association of Photovoltaic Energy Producers in Greece. “As a result, a quarter of the power we generated was cut out by the grid,” he told Al Jazeera, because supply exceeded demand.

“We expect that to rise to 40 percent this year. So what we’re doing is furiously adding capacity while producers lose income,” he said.

“There is now so much capacity being added that a lot of these investors are going to go bankrupt,” Loumakis told Al Jazeera. “The only way to avoid that is to install a lot of electricity storage, but what is currently under construction is still much too little.”

There was also bad news in the United States, where emissions rose by 2.4 percent last year after two years of declines, due to a rise in coal-fired generation, Axios reported, citing research by the Rhodium Group.

The administration of US President Donald Trump has pledged not to shut down any coal-fired electricity plants, and has been cancelling licences for offshore wind and onshore solar parks. The US also plans to pull back $24bn in federal subsidies to climate projects awarded by the previous Biden administration.

In March, Ember said the US “remains far behind the European Union”, as wind and solar power generated 17 percent of its electricity in 2024.

Some of Trump’s reversals are being struck down in the courts.

Federal judges ordered the resumption of construction of large wind parks offshore New York and Virginia this month, and more Trump administration injunctions were being fought in the courts.

Legislation and litigation are key tools in making the clean energy transition irreversible, recent research has shown.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

The Crimean Tatar movement trying to ruin Russia’s army from within | Russia-Ukraine war News

January 22, 2026

Europe cannot condemn colonialism à la carte | Donald Trump

January 22, 2026

French firm Lactalis latest to recall baby formula amid contamination scare | Health News

January 22, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Business

Consumer spending pushes US economy up 4.4% in third quarter, fastest in two years

WASHINGTON (AP) — Powered by strong consumer spending, the U.S. economy grew at the fastest…

Quadric rides the shift from cloud AI to on-device inference — and it’s paying off

January 22, 2026

Winter storms threaten broad section of US from New Mexico to New England

January 22, 2026

The Crimean Tatar movement trying to ruin Russia’s army from within | Russia-Ukraine war News

January 22, 2026
Top Posts

Campaigning begins in Bangladesh for first election after Hasina’s ouster | Elections News

January 22, 2026

Death toll in Pakistan shopping centre fire rises to at least 60 | Construction News

January 22, 2026

TikTok, Facebook, YouTube: Bangladesh’s latest election battlegrounds | Elections

January 22, 2026

Trump’s ‘board of peace’: Who has joined, who hasn’t – and why | Israel-Palestine conflict News

January 21, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

About Us
About Us

Welcome to News Frame For You — Your Window to the World! 🌍

At News Frame For You, we bring you the latest and most reliable updates from across the globe, focusing on what truly shapes our modern world. From cutting-edge AI innovations to thrilling sports moments, from the heart of Europe’s business scene to the pulse of Asia’s emerging markets, we frame the news that matters to you — clearly, quickly, and intelligently.

Our Picks

Consumer spending pushes US economy up 4.4% in third quarter, fastest in two years

January 22, 2026

Quadric rides the shift from cloud AI to on-device inference — and it’s paying off

January 22, 2026

Winter storms threaten broad section of US from New Mexico to New England

January 22, 2026
Most Popular

Laude Institute announces first batch of ‘Slingshots’ AI grants

November 7, 2025

Sam Altman says OpenAI has $20B ARR and about $1.4 trillion in data center commitments

November 7, 2025

Amazon launches an AI-powered Kindle Translate service for e-book authors

November 7, 2025
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2026 newsframeforyou. Designed by newsframeforyou.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.