Utility-scale solar capacity hits 45GW worldwide, Australia still outside top 20

Published by

Utility-scale solar PV reached a total global generating capacity of 45GW at the half-way mark of 2015 – more than double the amount at the end of 2013 – according to the latest figures from Wiki-Solar.org, with a total of 8GW commissioned so far in what looks like being another record-breaking year.

The report, released on Tuesday, finds big solar installations “fairly evenly split” between the three leading continents – Asia, Europe and North America – but says the other three are also starting to feature.

As you can see in the pie chart below, Australia is still a fairly small player in the global big solar stake, but according to Wiki-Solar founder, Philip Wolfe, has moved up the rankings slightly thanks to the 102MW Nyngan solar project in NSW. Australia now comes in at number 24 in the global rankings, accounting for around 130MW of the 200MW of installed capacity credited to the Australasia-Oceania region.

This is certainly an improvement on its ranking of 34th in January 2014, when it had a tiny 10MW of installed utility scale capacity – less, at the time, than the small African nation of Mauritania. At least now, it has overtaken Portugal.

China – which now has in excess of 10GW of installed utility-scale solar – and the UK are the countries with the greatest growth for the year, so far. The UK broke into the top three with 2GW of new capacity installed in the first quarter of 2015, says the report.

All up, around three-quarters of the total capacity of utility-scale PV power plants was installed in the top six countries at the end of June 2015.

But Wolfe notes that big solar developments in countries further down the top 10 list are also interesting, with Japan, France and Canada all continuing to build capacity.

“It looks to be only a matter of time before they too overtake Spain,” he said.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Recent Posts

State’s stand-alone solar fail: The energy transition should deliver more than a new landlord

Western Power's stand-alone power system program is not an energy transition solution. It is a…

10 July 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: Electric truck network starts to take shape

Electric trucks are suddenly big news in Australia. We catch up with NewVolt's Anthony Headlam…

10 July 2026

Watchdog warns spike in home battery complaints could damage consumer trust

Home batteries are flying off shelves and the consumer watchdog wants stronger protection to maintain…

10 July 2026

Offshore wind developers pray for bipartisan support ahead of key state election

Victoria's offshore wind developers are much more optimistic than they were a year ago, but…

10 July 2026

State utility bets on Australian-first compressed CO2 “energy dome,” with up to 12 hours of storage

Victoria's Latrobe Valley will soon host a ground-breaking long-duration energy storage facility capable of continuously…

10 July 2026

“It’s nuts:” Wind developer forced to truck giant transformer thousands of kilometres after port refusal

Renewable developer says the refusal of its closest port to handle a giant transformer has…

10 July 2026