Switzerland ranks 22nd in European renewable energy adoption
Swiss renewable energy production lags behind European peers, covering only 11.2% of electricity consumption compared to EU average of 28.3%.
Swiss renewable energy production lags behind European peers, covering only 11.2% of electricity consumption compared to EU average of 28.3%.

"At 11.2%, the share of electricity production from new renewable sources in Switzerlandâs total electricity consumption is very low by European standards."
"Further efforts towards a fully renewable electricity supply are necessary in order to achieve the targets set out in the Electricity Act."
Switzerland has plummeted to a disappointing 22nd place out of 28 European nations in the race for renewable energy adoption, a stark reality check delivered by the Swiss Energy Foundation (SES). While the European Union surges ahead with an average renewable share of 28.3%, Switzerland languishes at a mere 11.2%. This is not just a statistical dip; it is a significant strategic failure for a nation that prides itself on innovation.
The contrast with our neighbors is particularly jarring. Among the eight countries bordering or near us, Switzerland ranks second to last, outperforming only a handful of nations like Malta and Slovenia. While leader Denmark now powers over three-quarters of its grid with wind and solar, Switzerland is grappling to cover barely a tenth of its consumption with these technologies. The message is clear: the pace of the Swiss energy transition is dangerously slow compared to the aggressive acceleration seen across the rest of the continent.
Amidst the gloomy rankings, solar energy provides a solitary beacon of progress. Switzerland has clawed its way up two spots to rank 11th in solar power production for 2024. Despite poor sunshine conditions last year, per capita production surged by approximately 150 kilowatt hours (kWh) to reach a total of 681 kWh. This demonstrates that when the Swiss focus on a technology, the capacity for rapid implementation exists.
However, even this success is dwarfed by the true heavyweights of solar adoption. The Netherlands, leading the charge, boasts a staggering 1206 kWh per capitaânearly double the Swiss output. While the upward trend in photovoltaics is undeniable, it serves to highlight the disparity in ambition. We are moving in the right direction, but the velocity of our ascent is insufficient to catch the European frontrunners who are aggressively expanding their solar infrastructure.
If solar is a glimmer of hope, wind energy remains Switzerlandâs absolute Achilles' heel. The nation sits stagnant at 25th place, with an abysmal production of just 19 kilowatt hours per capita. This figure has remained virtually unchanged, signaling a complete paralysis in wind infrastructure development.
To put this into a humiliating perspective, Sweden, the European champion of wind energy, generates a colossal 3930 kWh per capita. The gap is not just large; it is astronomical. While other nations are harvesting the gales to power their industries, Switzerlandâs potential remains almost entirely untapped. The SES report underscores that this is not a lack of natural resources, but a failure to utilize existing potential. Without unlocking wind energy, the dream of a balanced, year-round renewable grid remains mathematically impossible.
The data presents a critical ultimatum: accelerate or become irrelevant in the European energy market. The Swiss Energy Foundation emphasizes that the potential for domestic renewable production is far from exhausted. The targets set out in the recent Electricity Act are not merely bureaucratic goals; they are essential benchmarks that Switzerland is currently failing to meet.
Furthermore, the SES explicitly links this domestic sluggishness to broader geopolitical isolation, stating that an electricity agreement with the EU is "essential." As Europe integrates its grid to optimize renewable flows, Switzerland risks being left on the periphery. The technology exists, and the legislative framework is being built, but the execution is lagging. To shift from the bottom quartile to a position of leadership, Switzerland must urgently unlock its wind potential and supercharge its solar initiatives. The time for incremental steps has passed; a leap is required.