In 2024, 25.4% of all final energy consumed in the European Union was obtained from renewable sources, about one percentage point more than in 2023. This increase was largely driven by growth of solar and wind power, followed by heat pumps. The share of renewables in Europe is expected to grow further. Meeting the new minimum EU target for renewable sources of 42.5% by 2030 will require doubling the rates of renewables deployment seen over the past decade, and a deep transformation of the European energy system.

Figure 1. Progress towards renewable energy source targets for EU-27

Renewable energy sources (RES) have multiple benefits for society compared with fossil fuels, such as mitigating climate change, reducing the emission of air pollutants and improving energy supply security. The revised Renewable Energy Directive increases the binding target for 2030 from 32% to a minimum of 42.5% share of renewables in EU energy consumption, with the aim of achieving 45%. Each Member State will contribute to this common target. No binding national targets have been set.

At 25.4% in 2024, the share of renewables in the EU is estimated to have increased by almost one percentage point from 2023. The increase is slightly lower than the average annual pace of growth recorded in the previous five years. The Fit-for-55 EU policy package and higher EU ambitions introduced by the RepowerEU plan, leading to the adoption of the revised Renewable Energy Directive, are especially relevant to eliminate the EU’s dependency on Russian fossil fuels, in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In absolute values, the gross final consumption of renewables grew by an estimated 8.7 million tonnes oil equivalent (Mtoe) between 2023 and 2024, driven by a substantial increase in solar power (by 19%) and wind power generation (by 6%).

Non-renewables saw a smaller reduction than in previous years, of only 1%, linked to lower energy supply from coal and higher output from nuclear energy.

The electricity system continued to lead decarbonisation efforts in 2024, with 47% of all EU power generated from renewable sources. It was followed by heating and cooling (27%) and transport (11%), where renewable energy from heat pumps (+6%) and renewable electricity consumption in road transport (+27%) increased notably, compared to 2023.

Solid, gaseous and liquid biomass fuels together formed the largest category in 2024, totalling 46% of all renewable energy consumption (49% when including municipal solid waste).

Wind (18%), hydro power (12%) and solar photovoltaics (11%) were the other three largest renewable energy sources, followed by heat pumps and liquid biofuels (both with 8% share of all renewable energy use). Other renewables sources were biogases, renewable waste, geothermal and solar thermal.

Looking at long-term trends, the RES share more than doubled between 2005 and 2024. This was driven by dedicated policies and support schemes, as well as increased economic competitiveness of renewables. The increase represents a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.0% over the last decade (4.9% since 2005).

Modelling by the IEA and Ember shows that reaching the 2030 target of a 42.5% share of renewables is feasible if fast action is taken to improve access to capital for investments in renewables and energy efficiency. This EEA report echoes these findings and outlines levers to enhance the energy transition.

Figure 2. Share of energy from renewable sources, by country

Sweden, Finland and Denmark had the highest RES shares among Member States in 2024 due to strong hydro industries (Sweden and Finland), wind power and wide use of solid biofuels for district heating. By contrast, Luxembourg and Belgium reported the lowest deployment of renewables (15% and 14% respectively) in 2024.

Over time, Denmark, Sweden, Estonia and Finland have shown the highest growth in RES shares, with more than 23 percentage points increase since 2005. However, Croatia, Slovenia and Romania have seen an increase of less than eight percentage points since 2005.

In the short-term, renewable energy shares are estimated to have increased in 18 Member States between 2023 and 2024. Lithuania, Poland, the Netherlands and Denmark top the list, increasing their RES share by two percentage points or more in 2024.

In the European Economic Area, Norway and Iceland both have RES shares above 75%. The two countries generate most of their electricity from hydropower, while in Iceland, geothermal energy provides most of the heating.