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Policy changes in US will have marginal impact on global energy transition

Policy changes in the United States introduced by the administration of President Donald Trump will have only a marginal impact on the global energy transition, according to the latest Energy Transition Outlook, produced by DNV.

Norwegian consulting firm DNV pointed out in a report that energy use by artificial intelligence may seem alarming, but that it is projected to stay below booming sectors like electric vehicle (EV) charging and cooling of buildings.

“DNV’s annual Energy Transition Outlook has consistently forecast a shift from today’s 80/20 fossil/non-fossil primary energy mix to a 50/50 mix by 2050. That is still our prediction this year. Although some aspects of the transition are supercharged and progressing rapidly, other aspects have hit turbulence and are delayed. This leads to a marginally slower transition than our forecast last year,” CEO Remi Eriksen said.

According to the report, in the US, fossil fuel promotion and the reversal of clean energy support policies are slowing the nation’s transition.

However, China continues to set renewables buildout records with 390 GW of solar PV (56% share of new global capacity) and 86 GW of wind (60% share) expected to be installed this year. The country is also fueling the transition in the rest of the world with its cleantech exports.

In the meantime, Europe is seeking to balance climate action with competitiveness, the report reads.

The continent is having a slow success with harder-to-decarbonize sectors, but renewable energy buildout remains relatively strong.

In the rest of the world, most countries are embracing competitive Chinese technologies, with year-on-year growth in installations at around 25%, data showed.

Eriksen said cheap renewable electrons stored when necessary in ever-cheaper batteries are already an unstoppable force.

“We forecast that solar – both with and without storage – and wind will be 32% of the global power mix by 2030. We expect a resurgence in offshore wind by 2030, such that variable renewables will provide more than 50% of all electricity by 2040,” he stated.

Solar power is 10% of all power produced worldwide today, and DNV projected it will be 20% in 2029 and 40% in 2045. Renewables would reach 65% in the global electricity mix by 2040, the firm added.

AI’s energy demand would be lowered by efficiency effects

According to Eriksen, soaring power demand from AI data centers is placing additional strain on already congested grids, particularly in North America.

DNV ‘s analysis finds that AI’s energy demand growth is likely to become more linear over time, outpaced, for instance, by EV charging and cooling demand, even as the cognitive services of AI expand exponentially. The main reason is growing efficiency.

AI’s energy use is forecasted at only 3% of global electricity by 2040. Data center energy use will quintuple by 2040, equalling 5% of all global electricity. AI’s share would be 3%, with the remaining 2% for general purpose data centers.

The report highlighted large regional variations – AI is the biggest driver of electricity consumption growth in North America, compared to EV charging in Europe and EVs and cooling in China and India.

For the first time, this year’s analysis extends to 2060

The report noted that this year, the world reached the milestone of more than 50 million EVs on the road. Most of them, 60%, are in China, with Europe at 21%, and North America at 13%.

The point of inflection — EVs at 50% of global new passenger vehicle sales — will be reached in 2032, the report projected.

For the first time, this year’s analysis extends to 2060 to reflect the continued transformation of the energy system after 2050. The report recalled that it is now widely acknowledged that the world will not achieve net zero emissions by 2050, meaning warming would exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius.

A decarbonization of energy mix is unstoppable but too slow, setting up grave risks for future generations, Eriksen concluded.

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EU faces first annual solar installation decline since 2015 – report

The European Union is set to install less new solar capacity in 2025 than it did last year – the first annual drop in a decade, according to SolarPower Europe.

In its mid-year analysis of the photovoltaic market in the EU, SolarPower Europe said new installations are expected to decrease 1.4% this year. It would be the first slowdown since 2015. The market increased by 47% in 2022, by 51% in 2023, and by 3.3% in 2024.

The EU is set to add 64.2 GW, compared to 65.1 GW in 2024, SolarPower Europe said.

The update comes after solar became the EU’s largest source of electricity for the first time, in June 2025. According to Ember, photovoltaics generated 22.1% of EU electricity (45.4 TWh) last month, more than any other power source. In absolute terms, it was a year-over-year increase of 22%.

Dries Acke, Deputy CEO of SolarPower Europe, said the 1.4% decline may seem small, but that the symbolism is big. In his view, a market decline, right when solar is meant to be accelerating, deserves EU leaders’ attention.

“Europe needs competitive electricity, energy security, and climate solutions. Solar delivers on all of those needs. Now policymakers must deliver the electrification, flexibility and energy storage frameworks that will drive solar success through the rest of the decade,” Acke stated.

The European Commission’s 2025 target for overal PV capacity is 400 GW, while by the end of the year the bloc should host 402 GW. To meet the 2030 target, and deliver the continent’s decarbonisation and competitiveness goals, Europe must install nearly 70 GW per year through the rest of the decade, according to SolarPower Europe.

Rooftop segment is shrinking

The projected decrease in solar is driven primarily by a declining rooftop segment, particularly home solar, the report reads.

Traditionally strong residential rooftop solar markets, like Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Czechia, and Hungary, are slowing. Households there are now postponing installations as the impact of the 2022 energy crisis wanes, according to the association.

There is one more reason – a withdrawal of incentive schemes without adequate replacements. It resulted in a residential rooftop market collapse of over 60% versus 2023 in most of the group. Similarly, Poland, Spain, and Germany are experiencing a decline of over 40%. Good news comes from utility-scale solar. It is expected to continue growing and amount to around half of all new capacity additions.

The authors of the outlook attributed the confidence to improved auction design, and the boost in auction-deployed solar from hybrid and co-located storage projects, especially in Germany and Bulgaria. Germany leads in solar auctions, followed by the Netherlands, France, and Italy, with Poland and Ireland also scaling up, the report underlines.

It also points to a weakening in the segment of corporate power purchase agreements (PPAs). They have been a key driver of utility-scale solar in recent years. However, in 2025, falling electricity prices have reduced buyers’ incentive to sign long-term deals.

New solar PPA signings have dropped by 41% in the second quarter of this year against end-March, according to the report.