Record 165 GW of Wind Power Capacity Added in 2025, Led by China, Report Says
Renewable power made up almost half the world’s total electricity capacity last year. This year, oil and gas prices have soared due to conflict in the Middle East and countries are looking for alternatives to meet rising energy demand.
- The rise in wind capacity installation was driven by strong demand for new onshore wind, which rose by 42% to 155.3 GW, the GWEC said, while new offshore wind rose by 18% to 9 GW.
- Asia, led by China and India, commissioned 131 GW of new capacity, which was 80% of the global total. China made up the bulk of that, adding a record 120.5 GW of new wind capacity. Europe was the second-highest region for installations, commissioning 19 GW of new capacity.
- The U.S., despite the anti-wind rhetoric of the current administration, added nearly 7 GW of onshore wind last year.
- As a result of the new additions, cumulative global wind capacity increased to nearly 1.3 terawatts last year.
- To meet a global goal to triple renewable energy capacity by the end of the decade, the International Renewable Energy Agency has said 320 GW of new wind capacity needs to be installed every year.
- Therefore, new wind capacity needs to be doubled annually from the current level, the GWEC said.
- But under current policies, the GWEC estimates a total of 969 GW of new capacity is expected to be added worldwide by 2030, averaging 194 GW per year.
- “Under all the scenarios that stay close to the 1.5 C global warming target, wind energy volumes need to undergo a dramatic and global expansion in the next few years,” it added.
(Reporting by Nina Chestney and Danny Callaghan. editing by Mark Potter)
Photograph: Wind turbines operate along a solar farm near Weifang in eastern China’s Shandong province on March 22, 2024. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)
Related:
- Energy Fallout From Iran War Signals Global Wake-Up Call for Renewable Energy
- Gulf Energy Industry Will Take Years to Recover From Iran War
- World Faces Largest-Ever Oil Supply Disruption on Middle East War, IEA Says
Copyright 2026 Reuters. Click for restrictions.
Popular Today