Solar PV electricity costs $0.044/kWh. New gas plants cost $0.039-0.101/kWh. The crossover already happened. Here is what the data shows.
This is the comparison that defines the energy transition. Solar photovoltaics and natural gas combined-cycle turbines are the two dominant sources of new electricity generation globally. They account for the majority of capacity additions in most markets. When someone asks "is clean energy actually cheaper?", this is the matchup they mean.
The metric that makes this comparison possible is LCOE (Levelized Cost of Energy): the total lifetime cost of building and operating a power plant, divided by its total lifetime energy output. LCOE normalizes the comparison between technologies with fundamentally different cost structures. Solar has high upfront capital and zero fuel costs. Gas has moderate capital costs but ongoing fuel expenses that fluctuate with commodity markets.
This comparison uses data from three primary sources: IRENA's Renewable Power Generation Costs report (global weighted averages), Lazard's Levelized Cost of Energy Analysis v16 (US-focused, unsubsidized), and BloombergNEF's LCOE benchmarks (regional best-in-class). Every figure cites its source. Where ranges exist, we show the full range rather than cherry-picking favorable numbers.
The short version: solar is now cheaper than gas for new builds in most of the world. But the full picture requires looking at capacity factors, storage costs, hidden externalities, and what happens when you add batteries. That is what this page covers.
The comparison table shows the key metrics side by side. Solar wins on cost trajectory and fuel risk. Gas wins on dispatchability and capacity factor. The question is which advantages matter more going forward.
Two numbers tell the structural story. Solar's fuel cost is zero. Gas's fuel cost is 60-70% of its total LCOE. That single difference means solar's price trajectory is governed by manufacturing learning curves (predictable, downward), while gas prices are governed by commodity markets (volatile, geopolitically exposed). Since 2010, solar costs dropped 90%. Gas costs swung up and down by 40% depending on the year and region.
The capacity factor gap (22-28% for solar vs. 80-90% for gas) is real. A gas plant produces electricity on demand. A solar farm produces electricity when the sun shines. This matters for grid reliability. It is also why the solar-plus-storage comparison (Section 6) is the honest comparison for dispatchable power.
The meter bars below show LCOE on a common scale. The width of each bar represents cost relative to the most expensive option (gas peaker plants). Solar PV is the narrowest bar. Gas peakers are the widest. The ranges reflect geographic and project-specific variation.
The visual makes the cost structure immediate. Solar PV alone is the cheapest option by a wide margin. Even solar plus four hours of battery storage ($74/MWh midpoint) is competitive with a new gas combined-cycle plant ($70/MWh US midpoint) and less than half the cost of gas peaker plants ($168/MWh midpoint).
These are unsubsidized costs. The US Inflation Reduction Act, EU Green Deal Industrial Plan, and China's domestic manufacturing subsidies all push solar costs further below gas in their respective markets. The comparison above is the conservative, no-subsidy baseline.
The cost trajectory is where the structural argument becomes undeniable. Solar follows a learning curve: 24-26% cost reduction per doubling of cumulative installed capacity, sustained across four decades (Fraunhofer ISE). Gas follows a commodity cycle: prices swing with geopolitics, weather, and pipeline infrastructure. One technology gets cheaper the more you build. The other does not.
In 2010, solar was 5.4x more expensive than gas. By 2020, they converged. By 2023, solar was 37% cheaper. The crossover happened around 2019-2020 on a global weighted-average basis. In high-irradiance regions (Middle East, India, Chile, Australia), solar crossed below gas years earlier. In regions with cheap domestic gas (parts of the US, Qatar, Russia), gas held a cost advantage longer but has been losing ground every year.
The learning curve has not flattened. Solar module prices hit $0.13/W in 2024 (Fraunhofer ISE), down from $4.60/W in 2006. Each doubling of global capacity continues to reduce costs by roughly a quarter. No equivalent mechanism exists for gas. When gas prices rose 300% in Europe during the 2021-2022 energy crisis, solar and electricity bills moved in opposite directions.
The fair comparison for dispatchable power is not "solar vs gas." It is "solar plus storage vs gas." A solar farm without storage cannot deliver electricity at 8 PM. A gas plant can. Adding a 4-hour lithium-ion battery to a solar installation makes it dispatchable for evening peak demand. Here is where that comparison stands.
The numbers are striking. Solar plus 4-hour battery storage ($46-102/MWh, midpoint $74) is now within $4/MWh of a new gas combined-cycle plant ($39-101/MWh, midpoint $70) on an unsubsidized basis in the US. The ranges overlap. In high-irradiance US states (Texas, Arizona, California), solar-plus-storage is already cheaper than gas for new builds.
Against gas peaker plants ($115-221/MWh), solar-plus-storage is not competitive. It is dominant. A solar-plus-battery system delivers 4 hours of peak power at less than half the cost of a new gas peaker. This is why peaker plant construction has collapsed in markets with solar resources.
Battery costs are the variable that determines when solar-plus-storage crosses decisively below gas baseload everywhere. Lithium-ion pack prices dropped 90% from $1,400/kWh in 2010 to below $100/kWh in 2024. The IEA projects another 40% decline by 2030. Every percentage point of battery cost reduction widens solar's advantage. Gas has no equivalent cost reduction mechanism. Its fuel comes from geological deposits with extraction costs governed by geology and geopolitics, not manufacturing scale.
For longer-duration storage needs, compressed air ($100/MWh), pumped hydro ($110/MWh), and gravitational systems ($130/MWh) are reaching commercial deployment (PNNL 2022). These technologies extend solar's dispatchable window beyond 4 hours, further eroding gas's remaining advantage in baseload generation.
For new electricity generation capacity, solar is cheaper than gas in the majority of the world's markets right now. IRENA's data shows 91% of new renewable capacity added in 2024 was cheaper than the cheapest new fossil alternative. BloombergNEF's Climatescope analysis found that in 60% of global electricity markets, new renewables are cheaper than running existing coal and gas plants, not just building new ones.
The remaining question is not "if" but "when" solar-plus-storage becomes universally cheaper than gas for dispatchable power. In high-irradiance markets, that crossover has happened. In the US midpoint, the gap is $4/MWh and closing at the rate of battery cost decline. In northern Europe and gas-rich regions, gas retains a cost advantage for now, but the trajectory is one-directional.
The $2 trillion deployed into clean energy in 2025 (World Economic Forum, Davos 2026) is not charity. It is not policy compliance. It is capital flowing to the cheaper technology. A record 593 GW of solar was installed in 2024 (IEA), a 29% year-on-year increase that exceeded total global nuclear capacity. That is not a trend. That is a structural shift in the global energy system, driven by cost curves that show no sign of flattening.
Gas will remain in the energy mix for grid balancing and regions with cheap domestic supply. But the economics point one direction. The learning curve runs one way. Every year, the case for building new gas narrows. The data does not hedge on this. Neither do we.
For new power plants, solar is cheaper than gas in most of the world. The global weighted-average LCOE for utility-scale solar PV is $0.044/kWh (IRENA 2023), while new gas combined-cycle plants range from $0.039 to $0.101/kWh depending on region and gas prices (Lazard 2023). In the US midpoint comparison, solar and gas are roughly equal, but solar has zero fuel cost risk and continues to decline in price.
Source: IRENA 2023, Lazard v16 2023Solar PV combined with 4-hour lithium-ion battery storage has an unsubsidized LCOE of $46-102/MWh in the US (Lazard 2023). This is competitive with new gas combined-cycle plants ($39-101/MWh) and significantly cheaper than gas peaker plants ($115-221/MWh). Battery costs fell 90% from $1,400/kWh in 2010 to below $100/kWh in 2024, and are projected to decline another 40% by 2030.
Source: Lazard LCOE+ 2023, BloombergNEF 2024, IEA 2024Gas plants still get built for three reasons. First, dispatchability: gas turbines can ramp up in minutes to meet demand spikes, while solar requires storage to deliver power after sunset. Second, existing infrastructure: gas pipelines, LNG terminals, and grid interconnections represent sunk costs that favor continued gas use. Third, capacity factors: gas plants run at 80-90% utilization vs. solar's 22-28%, meaning fewer MW of gas capacity can deliver the same annual energy output. As storage costs fall, the dispatchability advantage narrows each year.
Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2024Solar PV LCOE fell 90% from $0.445/kWh in 2010 to $0.044/kWh in 2023 (IRENA). Natural gas electricity costs have remained volatile, fluctuating between $0.039-0.101/kWh depending on fuel prices and region. Solar's cost trajectory follows a learning curve of 24-26% reduction per doubling of cumulative capacity, sustained across four decades (Fraunhofer ISE). Gas has no equivalent learning curve because its primary cost driver is fuel, set by commodity markets.
Source: IRENA 2023, Fraunhofer ISE 2024Standard LCOE figures do not include carbon pricing. When a carbon price is applied, gas becomes more expensive. At $30/tCO2, a gas combined-cycle plant's operating cost increases by roughly $15-18/MWh. The EU Emissions Trading System price exceeded €60/tCO2 in 2023, adding approximately €25-30/MWh to gas generation costs in Europe. Solar has zero direct emissions and zero carbon price exposure, making the cost gap wider in any jurisdiction with carbon pricing.
Source: EU ETS pricing data 2023, IEA/NEA Projected Costs 2023The Grove Briefing: capital flows, cost curves, and market signals from the green transition. No fluff. Just evidence.
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