Silhouette of wind turbines, for article on UK wind power

British wind power overtakes gas for the first time

For the first time on record, wind farms generated more of the U.K.’s electricity than gas-fired power plants — a milestone that marks a genuine turning point in Britain’s long transition away from fossil fuels. In the first quarter of 2023 C.E., wind supplied 32.4% of the country’s electricity, edging past the 31.7% that came from gas, according to a report from Imperial College London.

At a glance

  • Wind power share: Wind farms provided 32.4% of U.K. electricity in Q1 2023 C.E. — up 3% compared to the same period in 2022 C.E., marking the first quarter wind has ever outpaced gas.
  • Fossil fuel decline: Gas-fired generation fell by 5% year-over-year, while coal and gas combined accounted for just 33% of total electricity supply during the same period.
  • Renewable energy total: Wind, solar, biomass, and hydro together provided nearly 42% of Britain’s electricity in Q1 2023 C.E., with nuclear and cross-border imports making up the remainder.

Why this moment matters

Milestones like this one don’t arrive by accident. The U.K. has spent decades building out its offshore and onshore wind capacity, and the country now operates some of the largest offshore wind farms in the world. That long-term investment is showing up in the numbers.

The shift also arrives in a specific geopolitical context. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 C.E. sent natural gas prices soaring across Europe and exposed the vulnerability of countries that depended heavily on imported fossil fuels. Britain’s push to expand domestic wind generation was already underway, but the energy crisis added urgency — and political will — to the effort.

Iain Staffell of Imperial College London, who led the report, put it plainly: “There are still many hurdles to reaching a completely fossil fuel-free grid, but wind out-supplying gas for the first time is a genuine milestone event.”

The bigger energy picture

The 42% renewable share in Q1 2023 C.E. tells a broader story about how rapidly the U.K.’s electricity mix has shifted. A decade ago, gas dominated British power generation. Coal was still a significant source. Wind was a promising but marginal player.

That picture has changed dramatically. Offshore wind in particular has scaled up faster than many analysts predicted, driven by falling turbine costs, government auction mechanisms that guaranteed prices for new projects, and significant private investment. The U.K. benefits from geography too — the North Sea and the Atlantic coastline offer some of the most consistently windy conditions in the world.

The report, commissioned by power generator Drax as part of its Electric Insights series, captures a grid in transition. Nuclear and interconnectors with neighboring countries — including links to France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Norway — continue to play a stabilizing role, filling gaps when wind output drops.

What still needs to happen

One quarter of favorable wind data doesn’t mean the job is done. Electricity grids are complicated systems, and wind power’s variability remains one of the central engineering challenges of the clean energy transition. When the wind doesn’t blow — especially during winter cold snaps when demand peaks — gas plants still serve as backup. Britain does not yet have the grid-scale battery storage or green hydrogen capacity to fully replace that function.

The U.K. government has set a target of decarbonizing the electricity system by 2035 C.E., which would require not just more wind and solar, but major upgrades to transmission infrastructure, new long-duration storage, and a rapid buildout of demand flexibility across homes and businesses. The Climate Change Committee, the independent body that advises Parliament, has consistently noted that progress in some sectors — particularly home heating and transport — remains too slow to meet legally binding climate targets.

There is also the question of who benefits most from the clean energy transition. Energy prices in the U.K. surged sharply in 2022 C.E. and 2023 C.E., hitting lower-income households hardest. The long-term promise of cheaper, domestically generated renewable energy is real, but the transition costs and the distribution of benefits have not fallen equally.

A signal, not a finish line

What makes this milestone meaningful is what it signals about direction of travel. A country that once built its industrial economy on coal — and that still relies on gas for home heating — has now crossed a threshold where wind, not fossil fuels, is the single largest source of electricity in a given period.

The broader European electricity trend points the same way. Across the continent, renewables have been steadily eating into the gas share, with 2022 C.E. and 2023 C.E. representing particularly sharp inflection points driven by the dual pressure of the climate emergency and the energy price shock.

Britain’s wind farms turning the corner on gas is not just a data point. It’s evidence that energy transitions — slow, expensive, and politically contested as they are — can actually happen. And once infrastructure is built, the wind keeps blowing for free.

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For more on this story, see: Reuters

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