The rapid growth of solar and wind power is weakening the case for imported gas, even in the wake of the recent energy crisis.
A recent analysis shows that April 2026 marked the first time globally that electricity generation from solar and wind exceeded that from gas.
The two renewable sources accounted for **22% of global electricity generation**, while gas-fired power plants supplied **20%**, or 531 TWh compared with 477 TWh.
Just 5 years ago, solar and wind were at 245 TWh, roughly half the output compared to gas.
„This growth was sufficient to meet **most of the increase in global electricity demand** while limiting the rise in gas-fired generation,“ the analysts said.
Despite ongoing concerns over energy security, there is **no evidence of** a broad global **shift from gas to coal**.
For many import-dependent countries, LNG-based electricity is becoming increasingly uncompetitive compared with wind and solar, which are seen as **affordable**, domestic, and **secure** sources of power.
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Everyone’s watching the model wars. I’m watching where the infrastructure actually gets built. Labs still live in the US. Deployment environments? Moving elsewhere fast.
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The rapid growth of solar and wind power is weakening the case for imported gas, even in the wake of the recent energy crisis.
A recent analysis shows that April 2026 marked the first time globally that electricity generation from solar and wind exceeded that from gas.
The two renewable sources accounted for **22% of global electricity generation**, while gas-fired power plants supplied **20%**, or 531 TWh compared with 477 TWh.
Just 5 years ago, solar and wind were at 245 TWh, roughly half the output compared to gas.
„This growth was sufficient to meet **most of the increase in global electricity demand** while limiting the rise in gas-fired generation,“ the analysts said.
Despite ongoing concerns over energy security, there is **no evidence of** a broad global **shift from gas to coal**.
For many import-dependent countries, LNG-based electricity is becoming increasingly uncompetitive compared with wind and solar, which are seen as **affordable**, domestic, and **secure** sources of power.
Everyone’s watching the model wars. I’m watching where the infrastructure actually gets built. Labs still live in the US. Deployment environments? Moving elsewhere fast.