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In a first, wind and solar generated more power than gas globally in April 2026

188 pointsby speckxtoday at 2:36 PM177 commentsview on HN

Comments

_whiteCaps_today at 3:49 PM

I just upgraded the solar system at my family's off-grid cabin. It's incredible how much battery technology has improved over the last 10 years.

Everyone is getting tired of me checking the panel to see how many watts we're bringing in.

Next project, install a shunt and get a Raspberry Pi talking to it over USB. And then I'll be able to build a Grafana dashboard. :)

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erelongtoday at 3:05 PM

I know some people who are adamantly against solar and wind

(personally I like both but I can see some shortcomings - for example I have heard that ai datacenters are using gas at times because of its flexibility)

So what are some of the best talking points to "sell" solar and wind to the unconvinced?

Or will they just adopt it once it's seen everywhere?

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nonethewisertoday at 4:11 PM

Is it possible to increase the grid by add solar and wind and NOT adding an on-demand backup source (gas, etc.) WITHOUT ADDING RISK?

What I mean is say the grid demands 100. The grid is powered entirely by coal. You give it 120 for 20% redundancy. This is extremely reliable.

The grid demand is now 120. You now need 144 for 20% redundancy. You dont want to use coal. So you add solar and batteries.

Batteries are great because they normalize the volatility of solar generation over time, but they do not make solar truly on demand. So if you add 24 solar to the 120 coal you are increasing the risk on the grid. What often happens is you add 24 solar but you have 24 coal as a backup. Ideally the real-world use will be solar but in case of downtime your grid will not fail.

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singingtodaytoday at 4:45 PM

Progress! Build more, we need it..

mtmickushtoday at 3:43 PM

This is exciting news but the term power here should really be replaced with electricity which is clarified early on in the article.

Electricity only accounts for roughly 20-25% of all power / energy used and the vast majority of the remaining 75% is fueled by gas (cars, ships, heating, construction, ect.)

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citrin_rutoday at 3:47 PM

It's a good news but I didn't expect that coal is still on the 1st place and not really trending down. I though coal was largely replaced by gas years ago...

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philipkglasstoday at 3:40 PM

More good news from Ember, according to their Global Electricity Review 2026 [1]:

Solar power increased by a record 636 TWh to reach 2,778 TWh in 2025, a 30% increase from 2024.

Wind saw the second-largest increase, growing 205 TWh (+8.2%)

Driven by record solar growth, low-carbon power generation increased by 887 TWh in 2025, outpacing electricity demand growth of 849 TWh. Solar power alone met 75% of the net increase in electricity demand. Together with wind, the two sources met almost all (99%) demand growth.

For the first time in 100 years, renewables (33.8%, 10,730 TWh) overtook coal power (33.0%, 10,476 TWh) in the global electricity mix as continued rapid growth in solar and wind pushed the share of renewables above a third of global generation. Coal power dropped 63 TWh (-0.6%) in 2025, marking the first fall since the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. Combined with continued electricity demand growth, this meant coal fell below a third of global generation for the first time in history.

For comparison, I have collated information from the International Atomic Energy Agency's Power Reactor Information System. The fastest that nuclear power generation ever grew was 213 TWh added in 1985. Since the year 2000, the fastest growth year was 2004, with 111 TWh added.

[1] https://ember-energy.org/app/uploads/2026/04/Global-Electric...

jauntywundrkindtoday at 4:03 PM

Also worth looking at recent Australia events, where evening peaking is incredibly severe. But batteries have been carrying the entire load!

Incredible gobsmacking amount of stored energy on display here. Great to see. https://bsky.app/profile/neilgrant.bsky.social/post/3mneo3to...

nailertoday at 3:55 PM

I feel the energy conversation is dominated by people that don't realize how far Solar tech has come recently argiung with other people that don't realize short nuclear half lives have gotten recently.

greekrich92today at 2:47 PM

Solar and progress on better batteries is a more consequential and useful technological revolution than AI. Should be a huge story, but there's not enough money to be made via speculation so it's not.

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jqpabc123today at 2:44 PM

Renewable energy offers a competitive advantage for any energy intensive activity --- like manufacturing or AI.

China gets it, the USA doesn't.

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jmyeettoday at 4:10 PM

The percentage increases here don't really tell the full picture. Look at it in terms of pure TWh [1]. China just dwarfs any other country in terms of wind and solar deployment. I guess that's the difference between putting engineers in charge instead of those who believe in the magical powers of red heifers [2].

One of the short-term issues in the US is going to be that a lot of utilities depend on natural gas and natural gas prices are going to keep rising beyond whatever happens in the Persian Gulf because of increased LNG exports (that directly raises domestic prices) and the increased use of gas turbines for AI data centers. Plus all the consumers are going to pay for the infrastructure buildout for electricity for those data centers.

So, despite a large Y/Y solar increase in the US, electricity prices are only going up.

[1]: https://www.statista.com/chart/36117/electricity-generated-b...

[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48393661

chris_money202today at 3:05 PM

Finally some good news!

tonymettoday at 3:37 PM

*electricity . Gas is heavily used for heating , cooking & industrial uses (e.g. drying agriculture like hops, boilers etc).

I raise this point since policymakers get confused and try to ban gas, only to realize how critical gas is for food & industrial applications that consumers enjoy after the fact.

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yogthostoday at 3:35 PM

China having managed to position itself as the main driver of the green transition by investing into key industries illustrates the power of state planning. The markets simply can't operate on horizons of decades because there is no immediate profit to be had. You need long term planning and sustained investment that only a state is able to provide.

baggachipztoday at 3:12 PM

Great news. Now let's surpass coal, the far more insidious and prevalent source!

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fleroviumnatoday at 3:28 PM

[dead]

Danoxtoday at 3:17 PM

How is that working for German industry where you need dense energy if you are going to continue build anything big..

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