The world set a new energy record in 2024 C.E., installing 597 gigawatts of solar power in a single year — a 33% surge over 2023 C.E. and the largest annual addition of any electricity source in history. The milestone, confirmed in a new report from SolarPower Europe, marks the first time solar has claimed the top spot for new electricity generation worldwide.
At a glance
- Solar power installations: The world added 597 GW of new solar capacity in 2024 C.E., beating the previous annual record by a wide margin.
- Year-on-year growth: The 33% increase over 2023 C.E. continues a streak of record-breaking years for solar deployment globally.
- Future trajectory: SolarPower Europe projects the world could be installing 1 terawatt of solar per year by 2030 C.E. — nearly double today’s pace.
Why solar is winning on economics
The numbers are hard to argue with. Over the past decade, the cost of solar panels has fallen by more than 90%, pushing 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. That logic is now playing out at a scale that was considered unrealistic just a few years ago.
China accounts for roughly half of all new solar installations worldwide, driven by aggressive industrial policy and a manufacturing base that has driven panel costs to historic lows. Europe has accelerated sharply too, responding to the energy price shock triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine by making grid-scale solar a national priority across multiple member states. The feedback loop is real: cheaper solar brings more solar, which lowers prices further.
What 597 gigawatts actually means
It helps to put the number in context. One gigawatt can power roughly 750,000 average American homes. The world just added nearly 600 of them — in solar alone — in a single year.
That capacity means electrons flowing, carbon not emitted, and energy bills reduced for millions of households and businesses. Ember’s global electricity review shows that the share of clean power in the global mix has risen steadily for a decade, and 2024 C.E. represents the most dramatic single-year expression of that arc.
SolarPower Europe’s report also notes that solar’s growing share is helping reduce wholesale electricity prices in some markets — a benefit that flows directly to consumers, not just to utilities.
Solar and the future of energy security
For decades, energy security meant controlling access to oil, gas, and coal. Countries without domestic fossil fuel reserves were exposed to price spikes, supply disruptions, and political leverage from exporting nations.
Solar changes that equation in a fundamental way. Sunlight is domestic by definition — no country can embargo it. A nation that builds solar capacity reduces its exposure to volatile global fuel markets. This dynamic matters especially for developing economies across Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia, where imported fossil fuels have historically consumed large shares of foreign exchange reserves. The International Renewable Energy Agency tracks how financing access continues to shape which countries capture these gains and which don’t.
The distribution of benefits is still uneven. Countries with the capital and grid infrastructure to absorb large solar buildouts are capturing most of the gains. Closing that gap requires international financing, technology transfer, and policy coordination — none of which is guaranteed.
The challenges that come with record growth
More solar creates new problems that didn’t exist when it was a minor player. The most immediate is storage: solar only generates electricity when the sun shines, and the evening hours — when demand peaks and panels go dark — put stress on grids not designed for this variability.
Battery storage deployment is accelerating alongside solar itself, and hybrid projects pairing solar with wind, hydro, or batteries are helping smooth out intermittency. But grid modernization is the slower challenge. Existing transmission infrastructure in most countries was built around centralized power plants. Upgrading it is expensive and often politically contested.
SolarPower Europe’s own projections — that the world could reach 1 terawatt of annual installations by 2030 C.E. — depend on those grid investments keeping pace. The panels are getting cheaper fast. The wires and systems that carry their power are not.
A record built in hardware, not pledges
Climate progress has often been measured in targets and commitments. This is different. Five hundred and ninety-seven gigawatts is hardware. It is panels installed, inverters wired, and a market that has now made solar the world’s dominant source of new electricity — not by projection, but by installation.
Fossil fuel use is still rising in absolute terms in some regions, and the gap between new clean capacity and the retirement of old dirty capacity remains a live problem. The policy environment in several major economies is uncertain. But the underlying dynamic is no longer in question: solar is the cheapest, fastest-growing energy technology in human history, and 2024 C.E. was the year it proved it at a scale the world had never seen before.
Read more
For more on this story, see: SolarPower Europe
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Renewables now make up nearly half of global power capacity
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on clean energy
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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