Renewable Energy Highlights FINAL July 2024
Renewable Energy Highlights FINAL July 2024
Renewable Energy Highlights FINAL July 2024
11 July 2024
29,031 90%
30,000
80%
Electricity Generation (TWh)
25,000
60%
20,000
15,543 50%
15,000
40%
29.1%
10,000 30%
18.3% 20%
5,000 11.7%
10%
0 0.2% 0%
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Total electricity generation increased by 2.4% annually since 2011. Renewables
contributed at a rate of 6.1%, while non-renewables showed a 1.3% growth rate. In
2022 alone, renewable electricity grew by 7.2% over 2021. However, there have
been similar and larger annual growth rates over the past decades. Since 2010, the
largest growth in renewable electricity has been driven by solar and wind energy
(variable renewables), which reached 11.7% of the global electricity mix in 2022
with a growth of 18.2% from 2021.
Hydropower Wind energy Solar energy
Bioenergy Geothermal energy Marine energy
% VRE
9000 8,440 100%
8000
Renewable electricity generation (TWh)
80%
Share of variable renewables (%)
7000
6000
60%
5000
4000 40.2%
40%
2,846
3000
2000 20%
1000
0 1.1% 0%
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Renewable electricity generation by energy source
Over the past decades, the profile of renewable energy sources has significantly diversified. While hydropower *
continues to provide the bulk of electricity generation, variable renewables have steadily increased their share in
the global electricity mix, growing from 1.1% of renewable generation in 2000 to 40.2% in 2022.
In 2022, hydropower remained the largest source of renewable electricity, generating 4 330 TWh, a modest 0.8%
increase over 2021. Wind energy follows, producing 2 098 TWh, marking a 14.0% increase compared to 2021.
Solar energy, the fastest-growing renewable energy source in recent years, generated 1 294 TWh, a year-on-year
increase of more than one quarter (25.6%). Bioenergy produced 619 TWh, growing by 1.5%, while geothermal
energy contributed 97 TWh and marine energy was close to 1 TWh.
3.0
hydropower. Africa generated 205 TWh,
2.5
showing a modest growth of 3.5% across 2.0
all sources. Oceania generated 125 TWh, 1.5
a robust 14.1% increase across energy 1.0
*
hydropower (excluding pumped storage)
The G20 and G7 countries generated mostly non-renewable electricity in 2022 and less renewable electricity than
the global 29.1%. G20 countries produced 28.9% of their electricity with renewable sources, while the G7
generated 28.5% renewable electricity. Both groups have similar breakdowns in renewable sources. Out of all
renewable electricity generated in 2022, G20 countries had 46.3% hydropower, 28.4% wind energy, 16.5% solar
energy, 7.9% bioenergy and traces of geothermal energy. G7 countries had 36.6% hydropower, 33.1% wind
energy, 18.0% solar energy, 9.5% bioenergy and 1.2% of geothermal energy.
IRENA’s latest statistics include some minor revisions to the 2023 renewable generating capacity reported in
March 2024. Total renewable generating capacity in 2023 has been revised downwards by 5.2 GW to 3 865 GW.
The decrease occurred due to revisions in hydropower and bioenergy power plants.
The revised figures show that at the end of
2023, renewable capacity accounted for
3.9 TW or 43.0% out of the 9.0 TW of
global total capacity including non-
renewables. It indicates an unprecedented
14.0% increase from 2022. Such growth
established a recent trend of 10.0%
compound annual growth rate (from 2017-
2023). Within renewables, variable
renewable capacity grew by 23.4% over
2022 to reach 27.1% of total capacity.
The rest of installed capacity amounts to
5.1 TW (57.0%) of non-renewable power
comprised of 4.5 TW (50.4%) of fossil fuels, 398 GW (4.4%) of nuclear energy, 142 GW (1.6%) of pumped storage
and 45 GW (0.5%) of other non-renewables. The recent trend sets renewables as the fastest growing capacity
source combined with a slowdown of non-renewables and even large decommissioning of fossil fuel plants in
several countries.
In 2023, solar energy was the largest source of renewable capacity at 36.7% or 1 418 GW, followed by 32.7%
hydropower (1 265 GW), 26.3% wind energy (1 017 GW), 3.9% bioenergy (149 GW) and traces of geothermal and
marine energy. The share of variable renewables (wind and solar) has increased to 63.0% of renewable capacity,
indicating a shift towards these more intermittent energy sources. The status of solar energy as the main source
of capacity is likely to remain in future years, also reflected by its predominance in 347 GW out of 473 GW of
renewable power additions in 2023.
Renewables Non-Renewables % Renewables
Renewable capacity additions had a 600 553
100%
386
400
share of renewables in annual capacity 335 334
78
60%
310
additions has steadily increased, 300 268
278
266 65 70
248 243
reaching 85.5% in 2023. Non-renewable 200
237 236
217
233
135 473 40%
182 179 116 95 55
capacity additions have remained 200
153 146
167
110
135 93
If the historic growth rate of 10.0% since 2017 continues, the world would achieve only 7.5 TW of renewables,
missing the target by 3.7 TW (32.6%). To meet the target required a minimum annual growth rate of 16.1% from
2022 through to 2030. Despite the unprecedented growth in 2023, we still fell short of the growth required to
meet the target. With 2023 as the first year of progress, the world fell short by 2.1 percentage points; this means
that during the remaining years of the target period, renewable capacity must now grow by more than the original
target rate of 16.1% to compensate for this shortfall. A growth rate of 16.4% is now required over the remaining 7
years.
Heat generation
Commercial heat is used for various purposes, and in energy statistics we account for this heat in terms of joules
of sold heat. Among electricity capacity, electricity generation, and heat generation, the latter typically lags in
terms of renewable energy penetration. In 2022, only 6.3% of global heat generation came from renewable
sources, totalling 936 PJ. The remaining 93.7% (13 886 PJ) was generated from fossil fuels, with traces of nuclear
and other non-renewable sources.
The share of renewable heat generation has increased from 2.5% in the year 2000, albeit at a significantly slower
growth rate than electricity. Bioenergy holds the largest share, contributing 91.6% of renewable heat in 2022,
with similar historical rates. Other significant sources include geothermal and solar thermal energy. Europe leads
the way in renewable heat generation, accounting for 92.1% of the global renewable heat generation and with a
renewable share of 10.7% of the 8 028 PJ of heat generated in the region. Asia generated 6 351 PJ of heat in 2022,
but less than 1% came from renewable sources. Finally, the Americas produced 443 PJ of heat in 2022, with 9.2%
from renewable sources.