Renewable energy progress falls amid policy changes: IEA

Renewable energy progress falls amid policy changes: IEA
Photo: Collected

Online Desk

Published: 2025-10-07 18:41:18

Updated on: 2025-10-07 18:49:53

PARIS,

The International Energy Agency said Tuesday that policy changes in China and the United States are slowing down the growth of renewable energy, which is a crucial component of efforts to limit dangerous climate change, and will not meet a major target.
The international community established a goal just two years ago to limit the rise in global temperatures by doubling the output of renewable energy by 2030. However, according to the IEA, the objective will not be met.
The Paris-based organization that provides energy advice to countries predicted last year that adding 5,500 GW of renewable electricity would get the globe closer to that goal.

But the IEA now sees only a 4,600 GW gain, or 2.6 times the 2022 level, due to “policy, regulatory, and market changes since October 2024,” it said in its latest report on renewable energy.

The IEA revised down its forecast for the United States by almost 50 percent due to the early phase-out by President Donald Trump’s administration of tax credits for renewables and tighter regulatory controls over projects.

Meanwhile, China’s shift from fixed tariffs for renewable energy producers to auctions has shaken up the profitability of the projects and lowered growth expectations, it said.

Nevertheless, it said China still accounts for most of the growth in renewable energy and that the country is on track to attain its 2035 wind and solar power target five years ahead of schedule.

  • Energy security —

While growth in China and the United States may be slowing, the IEA said there was a more positive outlook elsewhere.

It pointed to India, which “is on track to meet its 2030 target and become the second-largest growth market for renewables, with capacity set to rise by 2.5 times in five years.”

It also raised its forecasts for the Middle East and North Africa by 25 percent.

In Europe, the forecasts for Germany, Italy, Poland, and Spain were also revised higher.

Solar panels accounted for around 80 percent of the global growth in renewable energy over the past five years, the IEA estimated, followed by wind, water, biomass, and geothermal power.

The outlook for offshore wind power was revised lower due to policy changes in key countries, the IEA said—particularly the United States, which has sought to halt projects already under construction.

The IEA also noted that renewables were helping countries meet their goals for greater financial and energy security.

“The deployment of renewables has already reduced fuel import needs significantly in many countries, enhancing energy diversification and security,” it said.

It added that countries need to increase the flexibility of electricity networks to cope with the intermittent nature of renewable power, which is expected to account for 30 percent of output by 2030, or double the current share.

-BSS