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In US, Wind, Solar Generate More Electricity So Far This Year Than Coal Has

22 Jun 2023

In a first, the two renewables dethroned "king coal" for the first five months of 2023.

Dan is a writer on CNET's How-To team. His byline has appeared in The New York Times, Newsweek, NBC News, Architectural Digest and elsewhere. He is a crossword junkie and is interested in the intersection of tech and marginalized communities.

Wind and solar power outpaced energy from coal for the first five months of 2023, a first in the US.

Robert Alexander/Getty Images

For the first five months of 2023, solar and wind power generated more electricity in the US than coal did, setting a record for the renewable energy sources.

Official data from the US Energy Information Administration indicates that wind and solar energy out-produced coal in January, February and March, CBS News reported, while preliminary figures show the same trend for April and May.

All told, wind and solar generated a combined 252 terawatt-hours from January through May, compared with coal's output of 249 TWh.

Read on: Low-Carbon Energy Investments Matched Fossil Fuels Last Year

Clean energy sources have outpaced coal before, first in 2020 and again in 2022, but only when hydropower is included. This is the first time solar and wind reached the benchmark on their own.

Adding hydroelectric to the tally, renewables have actually been outperforming coal for the last six months, since October 2022.

EIA Administrator Joe DeCarolis expects the trend to continue this summer and beyond.

"We expect that the United States will generate less electricity from coal this year than in any year this century," DeCarolis said in a forecast in May. "As electricity providers generate more electricity from renewable sources, we see electricity generated from coal decline over the next year and a half."

A focus on carbon-neutral sources, coupled with the lower cost of natural gas and the shuttering of many coal plants has pushed coal out of favor.

There was a brief resurgence last year, when Russia's invasion of Ukraine caused natural gas prices to spike. But coal's decline "is happening faster than anyone anticipated," Andy Blumenfeld, an industry analyst for McCloskey by OPIS, told E&E News.