The latest Ember review confirms that solar power overtook wind to become the world's largest renewable source, supplying 34% of global electricity while coal fell to 33%. This milestone follows a year in which renewables surpassed coal for the first time, with solar, wind, hydropower, and biofuels together delivering just under 34% of the world's power. Last year, Chile drew a full quarter of its power from solar and Hungary reached 27% of its electricity from the source, a jump from less than 10% in 2020. At least 50 countries drew solar for a tenth or more of their power, up from 15 in 2020. Solar's midday peak averaged 25% of global electricity in May, with the Netherlands at 77% and Hungary at 91%. The United States met 88% of its new electricity demand with clean power, while India met more than half of its growth with fossil fuels. A federal lawsuit temporarily halted the Trump administration's enforcement of policies that blocked solar and wind projects on federal land. Plaintiffs argue that 57 GW of new wind, solar, hybrid, and offshore wind capacity could be at risk, jeopardizing $905 million in investments. Offshore wind is expanding globally, with 9 GW of new capacity online in 2025 and a total of about 92 GW worldwide. In the United States, the sector faces challenges: a deal to refund French developer TotalEnergies if it cancels its leases, and French utility Engie reportedly in talks with the federal government. Turbine makers are also struggling, as an American subsidiary of German EEW Group declared bankruptcy in New Jersey, and GE Renewables seeks to exit its maintenance contract with Vineyard Wind after a judge struck down its plan.