Saturday, 23 November 2024
Home Fossil fuels provide less than a quarter of EU electricity for the first month ever

The following content is a news release issued by . The original news release may be found here.

Fossil fuels provide less than a quarter of EU electricity for the first month ever

For the first time, wind and solar generated more than a third of EU electricity

[Brussels, May 10 2024] New data from energy think tank Ember reveals that in April 2024, the EU witnessed a historic decline in fossil generation. For the first time, less than a quarter of the EU’s electricity (23%) was produced from fossil fuels. This surpassed the previous record low of 27% in May 2023.

Last year fossil fuels generated less than a third of the EU’s electricity (33%) for the first time, while solar and wind reached a record 27%, according to Ember’s European Electricity Review.

The transition from fossil fuels to solar and wind has continued to gather pace in 2024. Generation from fossil fuels in April 2024 dropped by 24% (-14.8 TWh) compared to April 2023. Both coal and gas fell sharply. Coal generation contributed just 8.6% to the electricity mix and fell by 30% compared to the same month the previous year (-7.8 TWh). Meanwhile, gas generation provided only 12.1% of the mix, witnessing a 22% year-on-year decline (-6.8 TWh).

Among EU countries, Germany saw the largest fall in fossil generation compared to April last year, with a 26% drop (-4.8 TWh), representing 32% of the total EU fall. Italy saw the second largest fall (-24%, -2.2 TWh), contributing another 15% to the regional fall.

Wind and solar generated a record third of EU electricity for the first time

In April 2024, wind and solar generated more than a third (34%) of EU electricity for the first time, reaching a new milestone in the EU energy transition. This share beats the previous record from May 2023 (31%). Overall, renewables produced over half (54%) of EU electricity in April.

Graphic: Wind and solar exceeded a third of EU electricity generation for the first time in April 2024

Even with recovering electricity demand, fossil fuel generation is plummeting

Despite a recovery in electricity demand, the EU witnessed a remarkable shift toward renewable energy sources. While fossil generation dropped by 18% year-on-year for the first four months of 2024, wind and solar generation increased by 14% compared to the same period last year.

With renewables displacing fossil fuels from the mix, EU power sector emissions were down 18% year-on-year over January to April 2024. 

“The once unthinkable is happening before our eyes,” said Sarah Brown, Ember’s Europe Programme Director. “Fossil fuels are on the way out of Europe’s power sector. Solar and wind have stepped up as the main players, proving they are ready to take on their role as the backbone of the modern clean electricity system.”

Downloads

Notes to editors

The analysis will be published here 00:01 Brussels, May 10: 

https://ember-climate.org/insights/in-brief/eu-fossil-generation-below-25-for-the-first-month-ever

Ember’s monthly generation data is available to download or explore on our website.

Media enquiries

Hannah Broadbent

Director of Communications & Strategy

 hannah@ember-climate.org

About Ember

https://ember-climate.org

@EmberClimate

Ember is an energy think tank that aims to accelerate the clean energy transition with data and policy. Ember is the trading name of Sandbag Climate Campaign CIC, a Community Interest Company registered in England & Wales #06714443. 'Ember' and 'Sandbag' are trademarks held at the United Kingdom and European Union Intellectual Property Offices. All content is released under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC-BY-4.0). Website powered by 100% renewable electricity.

© Ember ...

Read the full news release here

Related Articles

A view of an image announcing Brazil as elected host country for COP 30, at the COP29 United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Baku, Azerbaijan November 23, 2024. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo
Climate FinanceEmissionsPoliticsUnited Nations

COP29 climate summit in overtime, what are countries saying?

"The eyes of the world are rather focused on us." — Azerbaijan's...

Brooke Rollins, President and CEO of the America First Policy Institute speaks during a rally for Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump at Madison Square Garden, in New York, U.S., October 27, 2024. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
AgricultureBiofuelsPoliticsSustainable Aviation FuelTrade

Trump expected to pick Brooke Rollins to be agriculture secretary: WSJ report

Wall Street Journal report: U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is expected to pick...

FILE PHOTO: Northvolt facility in Vasteras, Sweden, September 29, 2021. REUTERS/Helena Soderpalm/File Photo
BusinessElectric Vehicles (EVs)

Goldman funds to take $900 million hit on Northvolt: Financial Times report

Funds managed by Goldman Sachs, which together ranked as the second-largest shareholders...

Login into your Account

Please login to like, dislike or bookmark this article.