Solar overtook coal in the European Union’s electricity production in 2024, with the share of renewables rising to almost half the bloc’s power sector, according to a report released Thursday.
Gas generation, meanwhile, declined for the fifth year in a row and fossil-fuelled power dipped to a “historic low”, climate think tank Ember said in its European Electricity Review 2025.
“The European Green Deal has delivered a deep and rapid transformation of the EU power sector,” the think tank said.
“Solar remained the EU’s fastest-growing power source in 2024, rising above coal for the first time. Wind power remained the EU’s second-largest power source, above gas and below nuclear.”
Overall, strong growth in solar and wind have boosted the share of renewables to 47 percent, up from 34 percent in 2019.
Fossil fuels have fallen from 39 to 29 percent.
“A surge in wind and solar generation is the main reason for declining fossil generation. Without wind and solar capacity added since 2019, the EU would have imported 92 billion cubic metres more of fossil gas and 55 million tonnes more of hard coal, costing €59 billion,” the report said.
According to Ember, these trends are widespread across Europe, with solar power progressing in all EU countries.
More than half have now either eliminated coal, the most polluting fossil fuel, or reduced its share to less than five percent of their energy mix.
But Rosslowe cautioned much work remains.
“We need to accelerate our efforts, particularly in the wind power sector,” he said.
Europe’s electricity system will also need to increase its storage capacity to make the most of renewable energies, which are by definition intermittent, he added.
In 2024, plentiful solar energy helped drive down prices in the middle of the day, sometimes even resulting in “negative or zero price hours” due to an overabundance of supply compared to demand.
“A readily available solution is a battery co-located with a solar plant. This gives solar power producers more control over the prices they receive and helps them avoid selling for low prices in the middle of the day,” the report said.
The think tank suggested consumers could reduce their bills by shifting usage to periods of abundance (smart electrification), while battery operators could earn revenue from buying power when prices are low and selling it back when demand peaks.
Batteries have advanced significantly in recent years, with installed capacity across the EU doubling to 16 GW in 2023, compared with 8 GW in 2022, according to Ember.
But this capacity is concentrated in just a small number of countries: 70 percent of existing batteries were located in Germany and Italy at the end of 2023.
Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 6 days ago
The problem with solar in much of Europe is that it’s basically summer power only. You can’t solve that with batteries, unfortunately.
I like using less coal and gas in summer, but solar won’t fix things in December. Wind will.
Voyajer@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Was the goal to ever only use one source of renewables?
Valmond@lemmy.world 6 days ago
So a problem with a solution then?
I guess batteries are for the evening/night/morning, not for the winter.
Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 6 days ago
Exactly. I’m just surprised that the article suggest solar+battery, which is a great solution for owners of solar farms, but not so useful for everyone else.
TurtleSoup@lemmy.zip 6 days ago
Wind or Nuclear.
I get that nuclear is a Boogeyman for some but it really is one of the better options for taking a step in the right direction and getting us closer to less oil dependency.
Jolteon@lemmy.zip 6 days ago
The the problem with wind is that it’s fairly unreliable (you don’t know when you’ll get power), as well as being relatively high maintenance (though not compared to coal).
Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz 6 days ago
There are some interesting early pilot projects where long term energy storage is being tested.
Current EV batteries are not even close to being suitable for grid energy storage, so we need something completely different for that. It’s probably going to take a long time before anything viable gets mass produced, which means that at the moment we’re stuck with internment renewables and fossil fuels.
Eyekaytee@aussie.zone 6 days ago
What do you mean?
www.abc.net.au/news/science/…/104498552
It can definitely store more than enough to power a household over night, for some people potentially a week, If I use 10kwh a day and have an 80kwh+ size EV battery it will definitely provide me with enough cheap power for a week and complimented every time the sun comes out
I still don’t understand why there aren’t great big fat energy pipes connecting Europe to Algeria and getting in a whole ton of that year round cheap sun energy