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    Home » Wind and solar overtake fossil fuels in EU power supply

    Wind and solar overtake fossil fuels in EU power supply

    January 22, 2026
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    – Wind and solar now 30% of EU power generation
    – Low-carbon sources produce most EU electricity
    – Record year for green energy despite political headwinds

    Brussels — Wind and solar power produced more electricity than fossil fuels in the EU for the first time last year, data published on Thursday showed, indicating the bloc’s continued shift towards low-carbon energy despite resistance from some governments.

    Wind and solar generated 30% of the European Union’s electricity in 2025, just above the 29% supplied by fossil fuel power plants running on coal, gas and occasionally oil, according to data from energy think-tank Ember.

    A 19% jump in solar capacity drove the record output from renewables. That growth offset reduced hydropower generation caused by drought, while gas-fired output rose 8% to help fill the shortfall, Ember said.

    Solar now provides more than one-fifth of electricity in countries including Hungary, Spain and the Netherlands.

    Europe’s electricity mix is now mostly low-carbon, with renewables and nuclear power together supplying 71% of EU electricity last year, the data showed.

    While sectors such as transport still rely heavily on fossil fuels, the EU has been gradually shifting to cleaner energy to meet climate targets and reduce reliance on imported fuel, including from Russia.

    The transition has faced political pushback. Pressure from governments including Germany and the Czech Republic prompted Brussels to weaken key CO2-cutting measures last year.

    An EU deal with President Donald Trump to massively increase purchases of U.S. energy has also raised questions about Europe’s plans to wean itself off oil and gas.

    Coal’s share of EU power generation fell to a record low of 9.2%, with top consumers Germany and Poland both posting all-time lows.

    Despite strong growth in clean electricity, Europe has struggled to ease costs for households and industry. Underinvestment in power grids has forced wind and solar operators to switch off during periods of high output to prevent network overload, wasting cheap electricity and adding to costs.

    Ember said price spikes last year coincided with peaks in gas usage and urged the EU to boost investment in grids and battery storage to stabilise power prices.

    *Kate Abnett. Editing: Mark Potter – Reuters

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