Original article
8 November 2025
Tarnia Riggs LinkedIn:
linkedin.com/pulse/energy-101-series-breaking-records-isnt-enough-race-triple-tarnia-r-tyapc/
COP28 UAE — Global Renewables & Energy Efficiency Pledge
https://www.cop28.com/en/global-renewables-and-energy-efficiency-pledge
International Energy Agency (IEA) — Renewables 2025 Report
https://www.iea.org/reports/renewables-2025
International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA)
https://www.irena.org/
Ember — Global Electricity Review
https://ember-energy.org/insights/research/global-electricity-review-2025/
BloombergNEF — Energy Transition Investment Trends
https://about.bnef.com/energy-transition-investment/
Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) — Integrated System Plan
https://aemo.com.au/energy-systems/major-publications/integrated-system-plan-isp
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/energy
Clean Energy Council — Clean Energy Australia Report
https://cleanenergycouncil.org.au/resources/resources-hub/clean-energy-australia-report
EnergyCo NSW — Renewable Energy Zones
https://www.energyco.nsw.gov.au/renewable-energy-zones
Infrastructure Australia — Infrastructure Market Capacity Report
https://www.infrastructureaustralia.gov.au/publications/infrastructure-market-capacity-report-2024
CSIRO — Australia’s Future Energy Systems
https://www.csiro.au/en/research/technology-space/energy/future-energy-systems
World Economic Forum — Fostering Effective Energy Transition
https://www.weforum.org/reports/fostering-effective-energy-transition-2025/
Reuters — Global Renewable Energy Growth Coverage
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/
RenewEconomy — Renewable Energy & Grid Infrastructure News
https://reneweconomy.com.au/
The Guardian — Global Renewable Energy Transition Coverage
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/renewable-energy
Financial Times — Global Energy Transition Reporting
https://www.ft.com/renewable-energy
Renewable energy investment and deployment continue to break records globally.
Solar capacity is accelerating, battery investment is expanding rapidly, and governments across the world are setting increasingly ambitious climate and energy targets.
Despite this momentum, global energy agencies continue warning that current progress may still fall short of what is required to meet long-term climate and energy transition goals.
The conversation is no longer simply about whether renewable energy is growing.
The real question is whether infrastructure, policy and delivery systems can scale quickly enough to meet future demand.
At COP28, governments agreed to work toward tripling global renewable energy capacity by 2030.
This target reflects growing recognition that large-scale renewable deployment is now central to:
• energy security
• electrification
• emissions reduction
• industrial competitiveness
• future economic resilience
International agencies including the International Energy Agency (IEA) have described renewable energy as one of the largest growth industries in modern history.
Solar alone is now being deployed at extraordinary speed across many regions.
Global solar investment continues accelerating due to:
• declining technology costs
• energy security concerns
• rising electricity demand
• electrification trends
• government incentives
Battery storage is also expanding rapidly as countries seek more flexible and resilient electricity systems.
At the same time, electricity demand continues increasing due to:
• population growth
• industrial expansion
• electric vehicles
• digital infrastructure
• AI and data centres
• manufacturing electrification
This means renewable energy growth must not only replace fossil fuels — it must also meet entirely new demand growth.
Technology costs are no longer the only barrier to transition.
The biggest constraints increasingly involve:
• transmission infrastructure
• approvals systems
• workforce shortages
• supply chains
• grid integration
• community engagement
• planning coordination
Large-scale renewable energy projects cannot operate effectively without the networks, storage systems and infrastructure required to support them.
Across many countries, transmission delivery is now struggling to keep pace with renewable generation growth.
Many renewable energy projects are being developed across regional and rural communities.
These communities are becoming central to:
• renewable generation
• transmission corridors
• battery storage
• future manufacturing
• workforce development
At the same time, expectations around:
• social licence
• community consultation
• cultural heritage
• environmental protection
• regional benefit sharing
continue shaping how projects are planned and delivered.
The speed of the transition will depend not only on technology — but on trust, engagement and long-term planning.
The renewable energy transition is now moving beyond early adoption into large-scale global transformation.
The next phase will require:
• faster infrastructure delivery
• stronger coordination
• grid modernisation
• workforce investment
• long-term planning
• resilient supply chains
Breaking renewable energy records is important.
Long-term success, however, will ultimately depend on whether governments, industry and communities can scale infrastructure systems quickly enough to support future demand and future economies.
The race is no longer simply about building more renewable energy.
It is about building the systems capable of supporting the future itself.
Written by Tarnia Riggs.
If there is a future industry topic, infrastructure challenge, or energy conversation you would like explored as part of the Energy 101 Series, feel free to reach out.
renewable energy transition, renewable energy infrastructure, energy transition Australia, transmission infrastructure, grid modernisation, battery energy storage systems, renewable energy investment, electricity transmission networks, energy security, renewable energy targets, clean energy future, renewable energy policy, energy infrastructure planning, community engagement renewable energy, social licence renewable energy
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