Large solar panel array in a sunny field for an article about solar installations

The world added 600 gigawatts of solar in 2025 — the biggest single-year surge ever recorded

For the first time in history, solar power is the world’s single largest source of new electricity generation. The International Energy Agency confirmed the milestone in a new report: the world added an estimated 600 gigawatts (GW) of new solar capacity in 2025, a 64% jump from the year before. No energy source has ever grown this fast, at this scale, in a single year.

At a glance

  • Solar installations: The world added roughly 600 GW of new solar capacity in 2025, more than any other energy source in a single year.
  • Year-on-year growth: The 64% increase marks the steepest annual rise ever recorded for solar, according to the IEA report.
  • Cost advantage: Solar is now frequently the cheapest source of new electricity generation in many parts of the world, making adoption self-reinforcing.

Why solar grew so fast

The economics are now almost impossible to argue with. Over the past decade, the cost of solar panels has fallen by more than 90%. That drop has pushed solar below natural gas, coal, and nuclear in new-build cost comparisons across most major markets. When the cheapest option is also the cleanest, decisions get easier for utilities, governments, and private investors alike. China leads global solar deployment by a wide margin, accounting for roughly half of all new installations worldwide. Europe is close behind, with the continent accelerating its rollout in direct response to the energy price shocks triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Both regions made grid-scale solar a priority — and the numbers followed. The IEA also notes that solar’s low cost is helping reduce wholesale electricity prices, delivering real savings to businesses and households. That feedback loop — cheaper solar leads to more solar, which lowers prices further — is one reason analysts expect growth to continue.

What this means for energy security

For decades, energy security meant controlling access to oil, gas, and coal. Countries that lacked domestic fossil fuel reserves were vulnerable to price spikes, supply disruptions, and political leverage from exporting nations. Solar changes that equation. Sunlight is domestic by definition. No country can embargo it. A nation that builds solar capacity reduces its exposure to global fuel markets — and the volatility that comes with them. This shift matters especially for developing economies in Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia, where imported fossil fuels have historically consumed large shares of foreign exchange reserves. The IEA’s renewables outlook shows that solar deployment in these regions is accelerating, though it still lags wealthier markets with better access to financing. The distribution of benefits is uneven, and that’s worth naming. Countries with the capital and grid infrastructure to absorb large solar buildouts are capturing most of the gains. Closing that gap will require international financing, technology transfer, and policy coordination — none of which is guaranteed.

The challenges that come with the boom

More solar creates a new set of problems that didn’t exist when solar was a minor player. The most immediate is storage. Solar only generates electricity when the sun shines. As its share of total generation grows, the evening hours — when demand peaks and panels go dark — create stress on grids that weren’t designed for this kind of variability. The U.S. Department of Energy tracks the rapid expansion of battery storage projects aimed at solving exactly this problem, and the pace of battery deployment is accelerating alongside solar itself. Grid modernization is the other piece. Existing transmission infrastructure in most countries was built around centralized power plants. Distributed solar — rooftop panels, community arrays, remote installations — feeds power in from many directions at once. Upgrading that infrastructure is slow, expensive, and often politically contested. The International Renewable Energy Agency estimates that grid investment needs to roughly double through 2030 to keep pace with renewable energy growth. Hybrid projects — solar paired with wind, hydro, or battery storage — are one of the more promising answers. They smooth out the intermittency problem by combining sources that peak at different times.

A genuine shift, not a projection

Climate progress has often been measured in pledges and targets. This is different. Six hundred gigawatts is hardware. It is panels installed, electrons flowing, carbon not emitted. The world has been setting renewable energy records for several consecutive years — renewables now account for nearly half of all global power capacity — and 2025 marks the year solar specifically crossed into dominance. That does not mean the transition is complete or guaranteed. Fossil fuel consumption is still rising in absolute terms in some regions. The gap between new clean capacity and the retirement of old dirty capacity remains a live problem. And the policy environment in several major economies is uncertain. But the underlying dynamic — that solar is now the cheapest, fastest-growing, and most widely deployed energy technology in human history — is not a projection. It already happened. Ember Energy’s global electricity review puts the trend in longer context: the share of clean power in the global mix has risen steadily for a decade. The 2025 solar surge is the most dramatic single-year expression of that arc. The question now is not whether solar will dominate new energy investment. It already does. The question is how fast the rest of the system — storage, grids, finance, policy — can catch up.

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