Our dataset comprises annual power generation and import data for 209 countries covering the period 2000 to 2020. Wind and solar – the fastest growing sources of clean electricity – hit a tenth of global electricity.
In 2028, renewable energy sources account for 42% of global electricity generation, with the wind and solar PV share making up 25%. In 2028, hydropower remains the largest renewable electricity source. However,
In all modeled scenarios, new clean energy technologies are deployed at an unprecedented scale and rate to achieve 100% clean electricity by 2035. As modeled, wind and solar energy provide 60%–80% of generation in the least
Share of electricity production from wind, 2023 [1] Global map of wind speed at 100 m above surface level [2]. The worldwide total cumulative installed electricity generation capacity from wind power has increased rapidly since the start of
Renewables contributed 35% of total electricity generation in 2023, specifically solar (16%), wind (12%) and hydro (6%). The renewables share of total generation was up 3% on 2022, the highest share of total generation on
Global onshore and offshore wind generation potential at 90m turbine hub heights could provide 872,000 TWh of electricity annually. 9 Total global electricity use in 2022 was 26,573 TWh. 10 Continental U.S. wind potential of 43,000 TWh/yr 9
In 2025, renewables surpass coal to become the largest source of electricity generation. Wind and solar PV each surpass nuclear electricity generation in 2025 and 2026 respectively. In 2028,
This represented an increase of 5% from 2021, mostly due to additional wind generation (due to high wind speeds and more offshore capacity). Wind was the second largest source of electricity (26.8%) in 2022 after gas.
In 2025, renewables surpass coal to become the largest source of electricity generation. Wind and solar PV each surpass nuclear electricity generation in 2025 and 2026 respectively. In 2028, renewable energy sources account for

Wind and solar generated over a tenth (10.3%) of global electricity for the first time in 2021, rising from 9.3% in 2020, and twice the share compared to 2015 when the Paris Climate Agreement was signed (4.6%). Combined, clean electricity sources generated 38% of the world’s electricity in 2021, more than coal (36%).
Global onshore and offshore wind generation potential at 90m turbine hub heights could provide 872,000 TWh of electricity annually. 9 Total global electricity use in 2022 was 26,573 TWh. 10 Continental U.S. wind potential of 43,000 TWh/yr 9 greatly exceeds 2022 U.S. electricity use of 4,000 TWh 6.
In 2022, wind turbines were the source of about 10.3% of total U.S. utility-scale electricity generation. Utility scale includes facilities with at least one megawatt (1,000 kilowatts) of electricity generation capacity. Last updated: December 27, 2023, with data from the Electric Power Monthly, December 2023.
Total annual U.S. electricity generation from wind energy increased from about 6 billion kilowatthours (kWh) in 2000 to about 434 billion kWh in 2022. In 2022, wind turbines were the source of about 10.3% of total U.S. utility-scale electricity generation.
The worldwide total cumulative installed electricity generation capacity from wind power has increased rapidly since the start of the third millennium, and as of the end of 2022, it amounts to almost 900 GW.
Wind Resource and PotentialApproximately 2% of the solar energy striking the Earth’s surface is converted into kinetic energy in wind.1 Wind turbines convert the wind’s kinetic energy to electricity without emissions1, and can be built on land or offshore in large bodies of water like oceans and lakes2.
The European energy storage market is booming with Germany leading residential adoption (+58% YoY) thanks to €500/kWh subsidies. Italy's new tax credits drive 5.2GWh commercial deployments, while UK grid-scale projects exceed 8GWh with 2-hour duration systems. Key selection criteria: German-certified safety (VDE-AR-E 2510), 10+ year warranties, and VPP readiness. Top-performing products include Sonnen's hybrid inverters (98% efficiency) and BYD's Blade Battery (12,000 cycles @80% DoD). For snowy regions like Scandinavia, consider Huawei's -30°C compatible systems. France mandates carbon footprint declarations - Sungrow's ISO-14067 certified solutions gain preference.
For European homeowners, 5-10kWh systems with 3-phase compatibility are ideal. Top picks: 1) Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5kWh, 97% round-trip efficiency) for smart home integration; 2) LG Chem RESU Prime for compact urban installations; 3) SMA Sunny Boy Storage for retrofit projects. Critical features: EU-made battery cells (exempt from CBAM tariffs), dynamic tariff optimization (like Octopus Energy integration), and fire-safe LiFePO4 chemistry. Southern Europe demands 85%+ depth of discharge capability, while Nordic markets require -25°C operation. Always verify CEI 0-21 compliance for Italian grid connection and EnWG certification for German feed-in.