Data InsightsIn 2025, solar and wind produced more electricity than fossil fuels in the European Union

In 2025, solar and wind produced more electricity than fossil fuels in the European Union

In 2025, solar and wind produced more power than fossil fuels in the European Union.

Line chart of electricity generation share in the EU from 1990 to 2025 comparing fossil fuels and solar and wind. Fossil fuels begin around 55 percent in 1990, stay roughly 50 to 55 percent through about 2010, then decline steadily to about 28 to 30 percent by 2025. Solar and wind start near 0 percent in 1990, rise slowly in the 1990s and 2000s, accelerate after 2010 and reach roughly 28 to 30 percent by 2025, crossing the fossil fuels line in 2025. Not shown: 24 percent of electricity came from nuclear, and 17 percent from other renewables. Data source: Ember (2026).

Just a decade ago, almost three times as much electricity in the European Union was coming from fossil fuels as from solar and wind.

But last year, for the first time, solar and wind produced more than coal, gas, and oil combined. They accounted for just over 30% of total electricity production.

You can see this rise of solar and wind — and fossil fuels’ decline — in the chart.

This record happened despite a poor year for wind output due to low wind speeds and a slight increase in gas to compensate for lower hydropower output from dry conditions.

Explore more data for specific European countries based on the latest update from Ember.

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