Solar panels generating electricity at scale in California for an article about California clean energy

California now runs two-thirds of its giant economy on clean energy

California has crossed a threshold that energy experts once placed firmly in the future. In 2023 C.E., 67% of the state’s retail electricity came from renewable and zero-carbon sources — making California the largest economy anywhere on Earth to reach that mark. Governor Gavin Newsom confirmed the milestone in early 2024 C.E., citing data from the California Energy Commission, and the numbers behind it tell a story that goes well beyond one state’s grid.

At a glance

  • California clean energy: 67% of retail electricity sales came from renewable and zero-carbon sources in 2023 C.E., up from 41% just a decade earlier.
  • Battery storage: California’s battery storage fleet now exceeds 15,000 megawatts — expanded from under 500 megawatts in 2019 C.E.
  • Green jobs: More than 500,000 Californians now work in clean energy, seven times more than in the state’s fossil fuel sector.

How the grid actually got here

The shift didn’t happen by momentum alone. California’s Renewables Portfolio Standard, first passed in 2002 C.E. and strengthened several times since, set legally binding targets that pushed utilities to build solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, nuclear, and biomass capacity year after year. The policy created a long runway — and the runway paid off.

In 2024 C.E., the state added a record 7,000 megawatts of clean capacity in a single year. On most days, the grid ran on 100% clean power for at least part of the day — something that would have seemed far-fetched a generation ago.

The technical breakthrough behind that reliability is battery storage. During midday, solar generation charges a massive fleet of grid batteries. In the evening, when demand peaks and the sun goes down, that stored power flows back out. You can watch it happen in real time on the California ISO grid dashboard. That fleet — now over 15,000 megawatts — has effectively solved the reliability problem that once made critics skeptical of renewable-heavy grids.

An economy that grew while emissions fell

A persistent argument against ambitious clean energy policy is that it costs jobs and slows economic growth. California’s data cut directly against that claim.

Since 2000 C.E., the state’s GDP has grown by 78% while greenhouse gas emissions have fallen by 20%. That decoupling — more output, less carbon — is what climate economists argued was possible for years. California is now one of the clearest large-scale demonstrations that it actually works.

The California Green Innovation Index, published annually by the nonprofit Next 10, tracks how these trends interact. Its data show green jobs concentrated in solar installation, battery manufacturing, grid operations, and energy efficiency retrofits — and those jobs are spread across the state. They exist in the Central Valley, in inland communities, and in historically industrial regions, not only in coastal tech corridors.

Cleaner air compounds the economic case. Fewer hospitalizations, fewer lost school days, and fewer premature deaths all follow from reduced combustion — benefits that fall especially on communities of color historically located closest to power plants and freeways. Renewable Energy World noted that the health gains from this transition extend well beyond what the grid statistics alone capture.

What the final third requires

Reaching two-thirds is not the same as reaching 100%. California has committed to a fully zero-carbon electricity grid by 2045 C.E., and the remaining third is likely to be harder than the first two. The state needs significant new transmission infrastructure to move power from generation sites to population centers. Long-duration storage — beyond lithium-ion batteries — remains a technology that is promising but not yet deployed at scale. And making clean energy genuinely affordable for lower-income households is a policy challenge that market forces alone won’t solve.

Environmental justice advocates have pointed out that some communities near legacy fossil fuel infrastructure still carry air quality burdens that the broader transition hasn’t reached yet. That’s a real gap in the story, and closing it will require deliberate policy choices, not just grid-level statistics.

A signal larger than one state

California’s economy is roughly the fifth largest in the world. It has more residents than many nations, more industrial complexity, and more energy demand than most comparable jurisdictions. That scale is exactly why this milestone carries meaning beyond the state’s borders.

It fits into a larger global movement. According to the International Energy Agency, renewables now account for close to half of all installed power capacity worldwide — a share that has grown faster than nearly every major forecast predicted. California’s grid shows what that capacity can look like when it’s paired with storage, policy continuity, and real investment.

The state’s target remains ambitious. The path to 100% is not fully mapped. But 67% — in the world’s fifth-largest economy — is not a projection or a plan. It is a fact on the ground, and it happened faster than almost anyone expected.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Renewable Energy World

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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