Global
use of coal hit record high in 2024
Bleak
report finds greenhouse gas emissions are still rising despite ‘exponential’
growth of renewables
Fiona
Harvey Environment editor
Wed 22
Oct 2025 05.01 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/22/global-use-of-coal-hit-record-high-in-2024
Coal use
hit a record high around the world last year despite efforts to switch to clean
energy, imperilling the world’s attempts to rein in global heating.
The share
of coal in electricity generation dropped as renewable energy surged ahead. But
the general increase in power demand meant that more coal was used overall,
according to the annual State of Climate Action report, published on Wednesday.
The
report painted a grim picture of the world’s chances of avoiding increasingly
severe impacts from the climate crisis. Countries are falling behind the
targets they have set for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, which have
continued to rise, albeit at a lower rate than before.
Clea
Schumer, a research associate at the World Resources Institute thinktank, which
led the report, said: “There’s no doubt that we are largely doing the right
things. We are just not moving fast enough. One of the most concerning findings
from our assessment is that for the fifth report in our series in a row,
efforts to phase out coal are well off track.”
If the
world is to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050, in order to limit global
heating to 1.5C above preindustrial levels, as set out in the Paris climate
agreement, then more sectors must use electricity instead of oil, gas or other
fossil fuels.
But this
will work only if the global electricity supply is shifted to a low-carbon
footing. “The trouble is that a power system that relies on fossil fuels has
huge cascading and knock-on effects,” said Schumer. “The message on this is
crystal clear. We simply will not limit warming to 1.5C if coal use keeps
breaking records.”
Though
most governments are supposed to be aiming to “phase down” coal use after a
commitment made in 2021, some are pushing ahead with the most polluting fuel.
India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, celebrated surpassing 1bn tonnes of coal
production this year, and in the US Donald Trump has declared his support for
coal and other fossil fuels.
Trump’s
efforts to halt renewable energy projects, and remove funding and incentives
for switching to low-carbon power sources, have largely not made themselves
felt yet in the form of higher greenhouse gas emissions. But the report
suggested these efforts would have an effect in future, though others,
including China and the EU, could blunt the impact by continuing to favour
renewables.
The good
news is that renewable energy generation has grown “exponentially”, according
to the report, which found solar to be “the fastest-growing power source in
history”. This is still not enough, however: the annual growth rates of solar
and wind power need to double for the world to make the emissions cuts needed
by the end of this decade.
Sophie
Boehm, a senior research associate at the WRI’s systems change lab and a lead
author of the report, said: “There’s no question that the United States’ recent
attacks on clean energy make it more challenging for the world to keep the
Paris agreement goal within reach. But the broader transition is much bigger
than any one country, and momentum is building across markets and emerging
economies, where clean energy has become the cheapest, most reliable path to
economic growth and energy security.”
The world
is moving too slowly on improving energy efficiency, in particular cutting the
carbon generated by heating buildings. Industrial emissions are also a concern:
the steel sector has been increasing its “carbon intensity” – the carbon
produced with each unit of steel manufactured – despite efforts in some
countries to move to low-carbon methods.
Electrifying
road transport is moving faster – more than one in five new vehicles sold last
year was electric. In China, the share was closer to half.
The
report also sounded a warning on the state of the world’s “carbon sinks” –
forests, peatlands, wetlands, oceans and other natural features that store
carbon. While nations have repeatedly pledged to protect their forests, they
continue to be cut down, albeit at a slower rate in some areas. In 2024, more
than 8m hectares (20m acres) of forest were permanently lost. That is lower
than the high of nearly 11m hectares reached in 2017, but worse than the 7.8m
hectares lost in 2021. The world needs to move nine times faster to halt
deforestation than governments are managing, the report found.
World
leaders and high-ranking officials will meet in Brazil next month for the Cop30
UN climate summit, to discuss how to put the world on track to stay within 1.5C
of global heating in line with the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Each
government is supposed to submit a detailed national plan on emissions cuts,
called a “nationally determined contribution”. But it is already clear that
those plans will be inadequate, so the key question will be how countries
respond.

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