UK renewable power hits record high but gas generation also rises
Renewable power such as wind and solar provided a record 52.5 per cent of Britain’s electricity generation in 2025, government data has shown, but fossil fuel use also rose.
Britain has a target to largely decarbonise its electricity sector by 2030, which will require a huge scale-up of renewable power.
Renewable generation in 2025 reached a record 152.5 terawatt hours, up 5.7 per cent from 2024, driven by record output from offshore wind, solar and bioenergy, data from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero showed.
Gas power generation rose by 4.7 per cent and was the largest single source of electricity supplies, providing 31.5 per cent of total generation.
Offshore wind generation increased by 6.6 per cent in 2025 as more capacity was added.
Higher gas and renewables plugged a drop in nuclear generation which fell by 12 per cent to 35.9 TWh, with older plants decommissioned and increased outages across the ageing fleet.
Last year was the first in more than 140 years with no coal-fired power generation in the country after the last plant closed in 2024.
Net electricity imports fell 11 per cent from 2024’s record high to 29.7 TWh.
Total electricity demand increased slightly, up 0.2 per cent to 320.2 TWh.
Separately, the government said on Thursday that greenhouse gas emissions fell 2 per cent in Britain in 2025, with emissions from the electricity sector down 1 per cent.