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Solar Power Just Crossed a Threshold That Changes Everything

For the first time, solar generation supplied 30%+ of global electricity in a quarter. Here's what it means for data centres and big tech.

The International Energy Agency published a data point last month that received approximately the coverage it deserved, which is to say almost none. In Q1 2026, solar photovoltaic generation supplied 31.4% of global electricity production — the first time any single renewable source has crossed 30% of global supply in a calendar quarter.

<h2>The Data Centre Problem</h2>

AI training and inference are growing faster than renewable capacity additions. The gap is currently being filled by natural gas peaking plants in most North American grids, and by coal in several Asian markets where the largest GPU clusters are located.

<h2>What Big Tech Is Actually Doing</h2>

Behind the sustainability reports, the strategies vary considerably. Google has been purchasing what it calls “24/7 carbon-free energy.” Microsoft has signed long-term power purchase agreements that are genuinely additional. Amazon’s approach is more opaque — it publishes an annual renewable energy matching percentage that sounds impressive until you understand that annual matching allows you to consume coal power at 9pm and offset it with excess solar from a sunny afternoon last April.

// Author
Priya Natarajan

Priya covers the physical infrastructure of the digital world: power grids, data centres, undersea cables, and the climate math that ties them together. Based in New Delhi.

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