Solar Surpasses Coal in Historic Shift For US Electricity Mix

image is BloombergMedia_TGD9I1T9NJM600_10-06-2026_05-27-07_639166464000000000.jpg

Photographer: Rebecca Noble/Bloomberg

Solar overtook coal in US power generation in May, the first time the renewable source bested the fossil fuel in a calendar month.

Solar supplied 12.8% of US electricity last month while coal accounted for 12.2%, according to a report Wednesday from the clean energy think tank Ember, which analyzed monthly and hourly data from the US Energy Information Administration. 

The use of solar is surging just as the US scrambles to add new electricity sources to meet the insatiable power needs of AI data centers. The solar industry has managed to grow even as the Trump administration has taken steps to thwart its rise. It favors traditional electric sources, including coal and nuclear, which can produce power around the clock, unlike solar and wind.

“This is a structural change in the US power system,” Nicolas Fulghum, a senior data analyst at Ember, said in an interview. Companies are seeking more power, quickly, and are “looking towards solar to be a cheap, affordable and quick-to-deploy source.”

Solar generation in May surged 17% from a year earlier, while coal power shrank 11%. Still, the US remains heavily dependent on fossil fuels. Natural gas is the dominant electric source, with 37% of the electric mix in May, according to Ember.

However, solar continues to gain share, in part due to wider deployment of batteries that can store energy from panels to be used when the sun isn’t shining, including during peak demand hours at night. Solar and storage together made up 91% of new US capacity installed in the first quarter, according to a separate report released Wednesday from the Solar Energy Industries Association and Wood Mackenzie.

That’s likely to continue, with utilities and data center developers increasingly viewing solar paired with batteries as a key energy source.   

“We are going to continue to see record battery deployment year after year,” Fulghum said.

©2026 Bloomberg L.P.

By Emily Forgash

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