Global South Leads 2025 Climate Push Amid Renewables Milestone

As 2025 closed, renewable energy overtook coal globally and the Global South—led by India—deepened climate commitments at COP30, offsetting US retreat under Trump and building on momentum from China and Africa.

Building on the US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement and absence from COP30 detailed earlier this month, 2025 saw renewables surpass coal as the top electricity source worldwide, per recent data. The Global South drove much of this: India leads in meeting Paris pledges, where expanding green energy could cut air pollution, enhance resilience to extreme weather, and boost industrial edge.

At COP30 in Brazil, developing nations rejected Paris erosion, while developed countries committed to tripling adaptation finance by 2035 and new funds for southern initiatives. Yet challenges persist: Europe's grids strained from weak winds and droughts; the IEA slashed US green growth forecasts due to Trump-era curbs.

With emissions cuts urgent amid worsening weather, 2026 demands prioritized action on health, resilience, and competitiveness in frontrunners like India.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Two new reports from the International Energy Agency and Ember highlight 2025 as a pivotal year for renewable energy, with solar power leading growth and renewables surpassing coal in global electricity generation for the first time in over a century. This progress occurred amid a war in Iran that disrupted 20 percent of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas supplies. The analyses point to an emerging 'age of electricity' driven by renewables.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Solar energy supplied more electricity than coal across the United States in May, according to an analysis of government data. The milestone reflects the rapid growth of renewables even amid shifting federal policies.

Chinese authorities have issued new emission rules targeting strategic sectors including AI data centres to meet 2030 climate goals. The move comes amid the Iran war heightening energy security needs. The rules also call for greener digital infrastructure.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Google's annual electricity use increased by 37 percent in 2025, the largest yearly rise in the company's history. The growth stems mainly from expanding AI data centers and related operations. Operational carbon emissions fell 2 percent despite the surge, thanks to clean energy purchases.

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