David Fickling: The positive climate news you may have missed this year
Published in Op Eds
So much climate news comes out in any given week that it can be hard to keep up with it all. Much is gloomy, but there are positive developments all the time — so many, in fact, that it’s easy to miss some of the things that have been happening.
For the past few years, I’ve been compiling year-end lists of the more neglected good and bad climate stories to give an idea of the immense amount of change as the world transitions to new sources of energy amid a gathering environmental crisis.
Here’s my selection of major developments over the past 12 months:
Some grids have almost decarbonized
You might not know it from the prevailing mood of Trump-era defeatism, but in some parts of the world, decarbonizing electricity is approaching its endgame. Roughly three-quarters of power generation in the UK and Europe this year came from non-fossil sources, putting them in about the same place as Brazil and Canada, whose vast hydroelectric resources traditionally gave them some of the cleanest grids.
With more renewables added each year, current projects under construction and in late-stage development should put Europe’s grid between 80% to 90% clean energy, the level at which further advances will start to get far more difficult without massive battery usage, new flexible technologies, or both. That means a looming slowdown in renewable deployment, something that many will regard as some sort of failure. In fact, it’s a testament to the monumental achievement so far, and an example the rest of the world should now emulate.
We may have passed peak cement
As much as 8% of the world’s emissions come from the production of cement — but the collapse of China’s real estate boom is turning that tide. The country’s output through October was the lowest since 2009, suggesting that the full-year total will be in the region of 1.7 billion metric tons. Combined with the sluggish 1% to 2% pace of growth forecast in the rest of the world, that suggests global consumption will be the lowest since 2012.
There may be further to fall. China still consumes 1.2 tons of cement per capita, about four times the rate of the rest of the world — but construction starts, a leading indicator for demand, are collapsing even faster, with commercial groundbreaking at its weakest since 2005. Developed countries use only about 16% of global cement, and China is now developed in all but name. A boom like the one we saw over the past decade will never return. Even India and sub-Saharan Africa won’t be big enough to take its place.
EVs are going global
If you were looking only at the parlous state of electric vehicle sales in some developed markets — the U.S., say, or Japan or Italy — you might think the entire technology is faltering. Far from it. Plug-in cars have been comprising more than half of all sales in China and just under a third in Europe in recent months. More dramatic, though, is what’s been happening in less-noticed developing countries.
EVs have had a sales share of more than 20% in recent months in Turkey, Thailand, and Vietnam, while Indonesia isn’t far behind. Markets as diverse as Nepal, Ethiopia, Laos, Armenia and the United Arab Emirates are adopting EVs far faster than many developed countries. Some 27.3% of all passenger vehicle sales worldwide in the September quarter came with a plug, according to BloombergNEF. If you think the EV revolution is losing speed, it’s probably just a sign that your own domestic market is getting left behind.
I did a similar here’s-what-you-missed exercise last year. You can read the piece to decide whether my predictions came to pass or not, but here’s my attempt at an unbiased assessment:
A new dawn for solar
China’s solar industry has endured a season in hell. We argued that rising sales and thinner spending would restore profitability. China’s big six solar players have indeed cut capital expenditures to about half of last year’s level, but new rules at home and ongoing trade protectionism elsewhere mean BloombergNEF expects installations this year to rise only about 16% — a pedestrian pace for this sector. Far from returning to the black, losses are deepening, with little sign of relief in sight.
Europe goes electric
Sales of plug-in cars in Europe hit a speed bump in late 2024, leading many to predict that the region’s shift to electric vehicles was stalling. We argued the slowdown was temporary, with performance in 2025 likely to far outstrip predictions of 3.2 million sales. That looks to be on the money. By the end of September, the year-to-date growth rate was 28%, which should translate into nearly 3.9 million sales across the full year, just a pip short of the 4 million number we pegged.
Charging up the grid
A key element of electricity bill increases after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was the pivotal role played by surging gas in setting the cost of power across the entire market. We argued that the rise of lithium-ion was likely to shave these peaks by giving batteries a bigger role and flattening the extreme spikes seen in previous years. That seems to be playing out in some places: Wholesale prices in Australia’s main grid fell about 8% from a year earlier in the September quarter, thanks in part to reduced volatility and batteries undercutting gas.
The course of the energy transition never did run smooth — but I’ve noticed over the past few years of writing these lists that events in retrospect look much better than the depressing prospect you get from a cursory look at the news. Let’s hope that pattern plays out in 2026, too.
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This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
David Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering climate change and energy. Previously, he worked for Bloomberg News, the Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times.
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