Another first for renewables: Wind and solar outgenerate gas in April

May 22, 2026

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Clean energy journalism for a cooler tomorrow

It’s a milestone moment that shows just how much clean energy has matured in a short amount of time — and a lot more growth is on the way.


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It’s the first month when wind and solar combined to produce more electricity than natural gas did, per new global data from energy think tank Ember.

Just five years ago, the gap between what those renewable resources and gas generated was huge. Even in the best month for renewables, gas plants churned out about twice as much power. Now, the picture is very different: Wind and solar generated about 532 terawatt-hours of electricity worldwide last month, while gas contributed just 477 TWh.

This won’t be the first time wind and solar outcompete gas on the global stage.

Last year, the world met 75% of its new electricity demand with solar alone, and the remainder with other forms of carbon-free energy. The result? Fossil-fuel power generation declined — very slightly — even though the world consumed more electricity.

Meanwhile, the ongoing war in the Middle East bolsters the case for renewable energy. Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and its retaliatory strikes on Qatar forced one-fifth of the global liquefied natural gas export capacity offline earlier this year, causing supply shortages and price spikes for the many countries that depend on imported, rather than domestic, natural gas.

Already, some nations appear to have increased their adoption of renewables to shore up their national energy security.

The caveats of the April milestone must be mentioned. It’s just one month — and occurred during the shoulder season, the best time of the year for renewables, as breezes pick up and days get sunnier.

Then there’s King Coal, which still produces far more electricity worldwide than wind and solar. But it’s clear where we’re headed. The share of coal-fired electricity actually fell by half a percentage point from 2024 to 2025, marking the first annual drop since Covid and the first time in history that the dirty fuel produced less than a third of the world’s power.

In other words, coal should watch its back: It’s only a matter of time before wind and solar come for its crown, too. 

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