Renewable Energy Has Achieved Cost Parity: Utility-scale solar ($28-117/MWh) and onshore wind ($23-139/MWh) now consistently outcompete fossil fuels, with coal costing $68-166/MWh and natural gas $77-130/MWh, making renewables the most economical choice for new electricity. . Renewable Energy Has Achieved Cost Parity: Utility-scale solar ($28-117/MWh) and onshore wind ($23-139/MWh) now consistently outcompete fossil fuels, with coal costing $68-166/MWh and natural gas $77-130/MWh, making renewables the most economical choice for new electricity. . Renewable Energy Has Achieved Cost Parity: Utility-scale solar ($28-117/MWh) and onshore wind ($23-139/MWh) now consistently outcompete fossil fuels, with coal costing $68-166/MWh and natural gas $77-130/MWh, making renewables the most economical choice for new electricity generation in 2025. . New York/ London, February 6, 2025 – The cost of clean power technologies such as wind, solar and battery technologies are expected to fall further by 2-11% in 2025, breaking last year's record. According to a latest report by research provider BloombergNEF (BNEF), new wind and solar farms are. . In wholesale power markets, the hourly price is set by the marginal cost of the last activated unit in the system. Since wind and solar power have no fuel cost, they push the price down by replacing more expensive fuel-consuming power plants.