Still good news, but a long, long way from solar becoming the world's primary source of energy.
By the time they are ready they will have contributed so many carbon emissions, that they'll have to run for 25% of their expected life span to get them back. But by the time they are commissioned (~2036), solar + battery + solar-made hydrocarbons will have made them uneconomic, and solar would have made far fewer emissions.
Furthermore, they are big up front money sinks, creating a sunk investment, diminishing the gamma of future options one might have wished to invest in, or take advantage of, something nobody talks about. Investing in nuclear is like willingly tying a brick to your foot, severely limiting your investment options.
They are perfect for government vanity projects, though, where a lot of money can be siphoned off to personal crypto gardens, repeatedly. Money laundering is likely the leitmotiv behind why you see them being built.
I wonder if included these numbers in that calculation https://electrek.co/2026/04/16/tesla-cybertruck-spacex-1279-... ;-)
That's not enough. It's obvious this is going in the right direction but adoption is still too slow, considering how cheap renewables are now (and will be).
> And nuclear is making a comeback: More than 12 GW of new reactors began construction in 2025
Am I reading it right that growth in solar was 50000x that of growth in nuclear? (And those reactors of course won't be finished / online until some years into the future.)
If we attribute accidental evil, why should we not attribute accidental good?
Murdering millions of people wasn't exactly "accidental evil", it was very deliberate. Which parts of what these guys did do you think were accidental?
Stalin's support of Lysenko was a result of thinking Lysenko was actually able to drive agricultural growth.
Both mistakes led to mass deaths.
We still tend to attribute those deaths to those leaders, because their brutally authoritarian rule was what allowed those mistakes to go unchallenged and get fixed before they caused that level of harm.
Both of them also killed a lot of people maliciously and intentionally, but a large proportion of their death toll as a side-effect of their oppression, not the goal of it.
What is the analogue here for attributing the rise of alternative energy sources to Trump? Being too incompetent to avoid harm isn't the same as being too incompetent to avoid benefit, because your job is to create benefit.
It's Trump's job to create positive outcomes. If he creates positive outcomes by accident while trying to create negative ones, he should get panned for trying to create negative outcomes.

Image: Springwell Solar Farm
Global energy demand growth slowed in 2025 – but electricity use is still surging, and solar just hit a major milestone, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
According to the IEA’s newly released 2026 Global Energy Review, overall energy demand rose 1.3% last year. That’s slightly below the previous decade’s average and well down from 2024. The slowdown was caused by weaker economic growth, milder weather in some regions, and more efficient technologies.
But zoom in on electricity, and it’s a very different story.
Global electricity demand jumped around 3% in 2025 – more than twice as fast as overall energy demand. Even though that growth cooled slightly from 2024 (thanks in part to less extreme heat in places like India and Southeast Asia), it’s still running ahead of the long-term average.
What’s driving it is a number of factors: more electrification in buildings and industry, rising EV adoption, and growing power demand from data centers.
Solar was the single biggest contributor to global energy supply growth in 2025. It accounted for more than 25% of the increase – the first time a modern renewable has led global primary energy growth.
Natural gas came next at 17%, reflecting its continued role in electricity generation.
Overall, renewables and nuclear together met nearly 60% of the growth in energy demand. In fact, power generation from those sources exceeded total growth in electricity demand, meaning clean electricity more than covered the increase.
Global oil demand still grew, but only by 0.7%, right in line with IEA expectations.
One big reason: EVs.
Electric car sales jumped by more than 20% in 2025 to over 20 million vehicles, accounting for roughly 1 in 4 new car sales worldwide. That’s starting to put real pressure on demand for gasoline and diesel.
Coal trends were mixed. In China, strong renewables growth cut coal use in power generation. But in the US, higher natural gas prices led to more coal use as utilities switched fuels. Overall, coal demand growth slowed.
IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol summed it up: “Electricity consumption is growing much faster than overall energy demand – and one energy source [solar] is growing much faster than any other.”
And that shift is happening against a messy global backdrop – economic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, and volatile energy markets.
Under the surface, regional trends are diverging.
The US saw one of its strongest years of energy demand growth this century (excluding rebound years after recessions), driven by data centers, industrial activity, and a colder winter.
China still accounted for the largest share of global demand growth, but its growth slowed sharply to 1.7% as renewables scaled and efficiency improved.
Global energy-related CO2 emissions rose by about 0.4% in 2025, a slower increase than in previous years.
China’s emissions actually declined, thanks to rapid growth in renewables and other low-emissions tech. India’s emissions were flat for the first time since the 1970s (excluding the pandemic), helped in part by a strong monsoon season.
But in advanced economies, a cold winter pushed up fossil fuel use and emissions. As a result, emissions in advanced economies grew faster (+0.5%) than in emerging and developing economies (+0.3%) for the first time since the 1990s.
The electricity sector saw some standout milestones in 2025.
Solar added about 600 terawatt-hours of generation globally – the largest increase ever recorded in a single year for any power technology. That helped push overall coal-fired electricity generation down.
Battery storage was the fastest-growing power technology, with around 110 gigawatts (GW) of new capacity added – more than any year of natural gas capacity additions on record.
And nuclear is making a comeback: More than 12 GW of new reactors began construction in 2025 in several regions.
Since 2019, the rollout of low-emissions technologies has reached a scale where it’s meaningfully cutting into fossil fuel use.
The IEA says these technologies now avoid annual fossil fuel consumption equal to the entire energy demand of Latin America.
And collectively, solar, wind, heat pumps, and other clean tech are displacing natural gas demand equivalent to about half of global LNG exports.
The big takeaway from the IEA’s latest report isn’t just that solar had a record year – it’s that the system is starting to shift in a measurable way.
Electricity demand is rising fast, and clean power is increasingly meeting that demand. Solar alone leading global energy supply growth would’ve sounded optimistic a decade ago. Now it’s reality.
At the same time, the report shows how uneven the transition still is. Coal is falling in some places and rising in others. Emissions are flattening globally, but not consistently across regions.
Still, the direction of travel is clear: More electrification, more clean power, and more pressure on fossil fuels – especially in road transport.
And if EV growth keeps up at anywhere near this pace, oil demand will continue to weaken. The US-Iran conflict isn’t exactly endearing the oil industry to global consumers.
Read more: EV prices drop again as the gap with gas cars hits a record low
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