logo
World surpasses 40% clean electricity with Europe leading as a 'solar superpower'

World surpasses 40% clean electricity with Europe leading as a 'solar superpower'

Euronews08-04-2025
ADVERTISEMENT
The world generated more than 40 per cent of its electricity from low-carbon sources last year, according to new analysis from clean energy think tank Ember. That's a record not broken since the 1940s, when the global electricity system was 50 times smaller than it is today, and hydropower did the heavy lifting.
Now, it's solar energy that is soaring in a targeted race to build an entirely clean electricity system. Global solar generation has become large enough to power all of India, Ember's latest
Global Electricity Review
finds.
Power sector emissions also reached an all-time high last year, however, at 14.6 billion tonnes of CO2. This was mainly driven by a need for cooling technology during heatwaves, as 2024 turned into the
hottest year
on record - underscoring the urgency of the energy transition.
Related
Eight countries in Europe use renewables for more than half of their heating and cooling needs
The EU is well ahead of the global average, having generated 71 per cent of its electricity from clean sources in 2024, which include nuclear.
'Europe has cemented a global leadership in clean power,' Dr Beatrice Petrovich, senior analyst at Ember tells Euronews Green. Furthermore, 'it is showing the world how to have an increasing share of
renewables
in the mix', with nearly half (47 per cent) from solar, wind and hydro last year.
'Solar is not one country's story'
Solar generation in the EU almost doubled in the three years to 2024 to account for 11 per cent of electricity, surpassing coal for the first time.
Seven member states rank among the top 15 countries with the highest shares of solar generation worldwide. In short, Petrovich says, 'the EU is a solar superpower.'
The EU accounted for 11% of the global increase in solar generation in 2024.
Ember
There are national achievements to spotlight. In absolute terms,
Germany
generated 71 TWh of solar last year, coming in sixth place globally, with all countries dwarfed by China's 834 TWh output.
Hungary
has the world's highest share of solar in its electricity mix, at 25 per cent. This was due to a generous incentive scheme for residential solar that boosted capacity, Petrovich explains. It's over now, but the panels will keep doing their job for decades.
Spain
, meanwhile, gets the prize for Europe's biggest increase in solar generation last year. Its 10 TWh surge is again eclipsed by China's 250 TWh.
China
was responsible for more than half of the global change in generation - an astonishing 53 per cent - in 2024.
But, in Europe at least, 'solar is not one country's story,' Petrovich emphasises. 'Widespread growth really says something about how flexible this technology is, how scalable this technology is,' she says. 'There is a kind of a solar story in every country now.'
Even with less optimal weather conditions compared to 2023, an increase in panels - including on rooftops - led to more electricity being generated. There is no slow down in the growth of the EU's solar capacity yet, despite the high penetration rate.
Related
Major milestone for EU energy revolution as solar power overtakes coal for the first time
California, a blueprint for the EU?
Now it's time for Europe to show the world how to bring clean power to the next level, says Petrovich. That means having even more solar and wind in the mix and the flexibility to make the most of them.
This means a portfolio of solutions, including batteries for energy storage, smart electrification of transport, buildings and industry, and an enhanced grid to shift electricity around regions.
'We have the world's largest grid. Now we need to make it smarter,' Petrovich says, partly by removing barriers.
ADVERTISEMENT
Solutions that reward people for switching their consumption to times when renewables are plentiful could also help - for example, price incentives that encourage drivers to charge their EVs during the day instead of the night.
Fossil generation provided 29% of the EU's electricity, half of the global average of 59%.
Ember
The necessary technology already exists, Petrovich adds, and one place that provides a blueprint is
California
. Last year, the US state's combination of solar and batteries meant that a fifth of its peak electricity demand in the evening was met by batteries charged around midday.
Just three years ago that number was only two per cent - which is currently the situation for some key markets in Europe getting into big battery technology, such as Ireland.
''Maybe California offers a sneak preview of what we are going to see in Europe in three years' time,' she suggests.
ADVERTISEMENT
Related
Fish door bells, plastic-eating fungi and tree hugging: Positive environmental stories from 2025
Clean power is up to global challenges, from AI to Russia
There are many uncertainties about what the future holds and how the energy story will unfold in 2025.
Emerging technologies such as AI,
data centres
, electric vehicles and heat pumps are already contributing to the rise in global demand, the report flags.
The former two are particularly 'unknown', but Ember foresees that clean power growth is fast enough to support the rate of increasing electricity demand.
Heatwaves
were the main driver of the small rise in fossil fuel power last year and are likely to increase as the climate crisis deepens. But that doesn't have to mean a catch-22 fall back on fossil fuels.
ADVERTISEMENT
'Every country is in a position to match increased demand with clean electricity,' Petrovich says. A few ingredients make that easier, she adds, such as efficient appliances for cooling.
Europe learned a 'hard lesson' about
energy security
after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and has been ramping up renewables since.
'Now the situation is more tense with Russia, I think those concerns about security are really more material than they used to be and renewables are seen as this defence strategy,' says Petrovich.
Central-Eastern European countries are the ones to watch in terms of solar and batteries.
ADVERTISEMENT
Petrovich also says she is looking forward to seeing
wind
- which generated 18 per cent of EU electricity - accelerate this year thanks to faster permitting and, hopefully, more favourable conditions.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EU and Japan strengthen trade alliance amid global tensions
EU and Japan strengthen trade alliance amid global tensions

Euronews

time2 hours ago

  • Euronews

EU and Japan strengthen trade alliance amid global tensions

A day after Japan reached a trade agreement with the US on tariffs, the EU and Japan announced plans to strengthen their trade cooperation and combat economic coercion during the 30th EU–Japan summit held in Tokyo on Wednesday. 'The world is changing rapidly. For strategic partners like us, it means becoming even closer to face the realities of our times,' Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said after the summit, stressing this came against a global backdrop 'with growing trade tensions and uncertainty, fragile supply chains, the challenge of overcapacity and unlevel playing fields.' In a joint statement released at the end of the summit, the EU and Japan reaffirmed their support for a rules-based international trade order, with the US challenging global trade norms by unilaterally imposing tariffs on its trading partners. 'We concur together on maintaining and strengthening a stable and predictable rules-based free and fare economic order, including upholding a multilateral trade system with the WTO at its core,' Japanese prime minister Shigeru Ishiba said. The announcement of a deal between the US and Japan, however, overshadowed the summit's news, following weeks of difficult negotiations for Tokyo. The agreement announced by US president Donald Trump would set 15% US tariffs on Japanese imports to the US, easing back from a previously threatened 25% levy. For its part, the EU is facing equally difficult negotiations with the US administration, with no agreement in sight for now. The bloc is currently subject to 50% US tariffs on its steel and aluminium, 25% on cars, and 10% on all other imports. It is in this troubled trade context that the EU and Japan plan to step up the implementation of the trade agreement that has linked them since 2019. EU firms already export nearly €70bn in goods and €28bn in services to Japan every year and bilateral trade between both sides has increased by 20% since 2019, according to von der Leyen. The Commission president announced both partners will speed up the implementation of the agreement in areas such as government procurement and sanitary and phytosanitary standards. The EU and Japan also hope for more mutual investments. On the eve of the EU–China summit, the joint statement also announces cooperation to reduce strategic dependencies, such as on critical materials, on which China implements export restrictions. The cooperation will expand to economic coercion and non-market policies and practices, with China in both sides' sights. Between August 2023 and June 2025, Japan had to face a Chinese ban on its seafood imports. For its part, the EU has several ongoing trade disputes with Beijing, on electric vehicles, dairy products, pork and spirits.

Elon Musk's X fails to deal with Russian disinformation, study says
Elon Musk's X fails to deal with Russian disinformation, study says

Euronews

time2 hours ago

  • Euronews

Elon Musk's X fails to deal with Russian disinformation, study says

More than 100 pieces of content published on X from Russian state media and disinformation actors that fail to comply with European rules still appear on the social media platform despite being reported to X, according to a new report. The report commissioned by German non-profit group WeMove Europe, which was shared exclusively with Euronews, found '125 clear sanction-violating posts' on the Elon Musk-owned platform. Some of the posts included programmes from the Russian state broadcaster Russia Today (RT), which has been banned by the European Union since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. In one instance, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs account on X shared an excerpt from a documentary produced by RT, which shared a false narrative about an Adolf Hitler collaborator who was 'elevated to the rank of national hero by the Kyiv regime'. The post also provided a link to bypass sanctions and access the full film on Telegram. The researchers behind the paper had reported to X all the content deemed illegal under Europe's Digital Services Act (DSA), the bloc's digital transparency rules. The report found that only 57 per cent of the reports of illegal content received acknowledgement receipts, which breaches the DSA. Among the 125 reports, only one post was removed by X. The company said that there was no violation of EU law. In some cases, X responded to the researchers' complaints within two minutes, the report said, suggesting that automation is playing a big role in X's content moderation. The European Commission, the EU's executive body, launched a formal investigation into X this year for breaching the DSA and said it would finalise the investigation before the summer recess, which begins on July 25. However, the Financial Times reported last week that the Commission will miss this deadline as it aims to conclude trade talks with the United States. Euronews Next has contacted the Commission for comment about the latest report and the X investigation but did not receive a reply at the time of publication. In January, French prosecutors also launched an investigation following allegations that X's algorithm was being used for the purposes of foreign interference. The researchers filed the reports to X on July 8 and 9, 2025. While they were met with automatic replies in most cases that X would look into their complaints, in the majority of them, they did not hear back. Euronews Next has also contacted X for comment about the report but did not receive a reply at the time of publication. Russia's online war Under the EU sanctions regime, it is prohibited to offer content hosting services for sanctioned entities, such as broadcasters or sanctioned individuals. Russia has intensified its disinformation campaign in Europe since it invaded Ukraine in 2022, the researchers said. Along with official Russian government accounts spreading fake news, there were also accounts likely operated by the 'Social Design Agency,' a Russian company known to produce Russia's influence campaign 'Operation Doppelgänger,' as well as anonymous users repeatedly posting such material. 'Overall, the volume indeed exploded [since the war]. It's much more significant,' said Charles Terroille, a project and investigative research officer at the fact-checking group Science Feedback who worked on the paper. 'A lot of the posts that we flagged to X are for instance, documentaries, if you can call them that, so 40-minute videos hosted on X that are Russia Today showing, for example, how Ukraine deserved it all or how [President] Zelenskyy and all the government people and officials in Ukraine are just fans of Nazi figures and all these widely false and reported stories that Russia is propping,' he told Euronews Next. Terroille said another Russian method is to fabricate pages that look like well-known Western media outlets and spread them on X. He added that fake news about public health and misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines are still running, among other topics, such as misinformation about the environment and are 'absolutely weaponised' by Russia. For Taïme Smit Pellure, a digital campaigner at WeMove Europe who led the report, the most shocking part of the research was that the content is also translated into people's home languages, such as French, and is 'everywhere' on X. She told Euronews Next that both the Commission and X should be acting faster and that her organisation has reached out to the Commission but it has not had a 'positive response yet'. 'We know they are working on this, we know they are, it's not like they're looking away completely, just taking their time because they want to do it right and we completely understand that,' she said. Another recommendation for the Commission is for European governments to work together in a more coordinated manner to address this issue, said Saman Nazari, lead researcher of civic campaign group Alliance4Europe, who also worked on the paper. 'As long as we stay only working in our own little bubbles, we do not stand a chance against a multi-billion euro influence apparatus,' Nazari said. His recommendation for X is that 'there is not that much nuance. It's straight-up illegal content,' and that 'it doesn't take much time' to find such content and address it. 'This is incredibly low-hanging fruit,' he added.

EU, Japan vow joint push for 'fair' global trade
EU, Japan vow joint push for 'fair' global trade

France 24

time3 hours ago

  • France 24

EU, Japan vow joint push for 'fair' global trade

Brussels and Tokyo announced a "competitiveness alliance" to increase bilateral trade, address unfair practices, and boost innovation, at a summit in the Japanese capital. "In today's world, competitiveness has to be built with trusted partners such as Japan," European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen told journalists after talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. "Together, Europe and Japan represent a fifth of global GDP and a market of 600 million people," she added. "So, we have the scale to shape global rules on trade and tech in line with our values of fairness and openness." Facing a swirl of speculation over his future following a weekend election debacle, Ishiba said the EU and Japan concurred to work together to strengthen a "stable and predictable rules-based free and fair economic order". Von der Leyen congratulated the prime minister on his "successful negotiations" to secure a tariff deal with Washington, a feat that has so far escaped the European Commission she leads. US President Donald Trump announced Tuesday a "massive" trade deal with Japan, as a deadline looms for the EU and other major US trade partners to strike agreements or face steep levies. Tokyo said the deal would see a tariff on Japanese car cut to 15 percent. The EU's top trade negotiator Maros Sefcovic is due to speak once again to US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick later on Wednesday. Von der Leyen's commission, the EU's top executive body, is in charge of trade policy for the 27-nation bloc. "In a world of growing uncertainty, we are also stepping up joint efforts to boost economic security and resilience," Antonio Costa told journalists in Tokyo. Costa heads the European Council representing EU member states. He said the EU and Japan -- who back Ukraine in its war with Russia -- would push to deepen cooperation between their defence industries. Costa and von der Leyen will visit Beijing next for talks with China's top leaders on Thursday. Beijing and Brussels will mark the 50th anniversary of their establishment of diplomatic ties. But differences over state subsidies, market access and China's support for Russia are set to overshadow the event. burs-ub/del/jj © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store