Establishment of an offshore wind clearing house by the Taoiseach and a successful result in the Tonn Nua auction are among renewable energy highlights identified by Government ministers at a renewable energy summit.
Addressing the Renewable Energy Summit, Minister for Climate, Energy and the Environment Darragh O’Brien and Minister of State for Fisheries and the Marine Timmy Dooley highlighted Ireland’s “significant progress”.
“Ireland has made huge progress in transforming our electricity system as we move towards our target of meeting 80% of electricity demand with renewables in the near term,” they said.
“ Currently, we have nearly 8GW of renewable electricity generation capacity installed across the country, with circa 5GW of onshore wind generation and over 2.2GW of solar PV installed, with hydro, biomass, and other small sources also contributing,” they said.
“This comes as renewables overtook fossil fuel power generation in Europe for the first time in 2025, at some 30% of generation compared to 29% for fossil fuels. Ireland’s signing of the Hamburg Declaration earlier this month commits to a strong pipeline of offshore wind in the North Seas, with 100GW to be delivered in the coming years and 300GW by 2050,” they said.
Key highlights in 2025 identified by the two ministers included;
- A successful result in the Tonn Nua offshore wind auction, with Helvick Head Offshore Wind DAC offering €98 per megawatt hour, significantly below the average wholesale electricity price in Ireland in 2025.
- A fifth successful auction under the Renewable Electricity Support Scheme (RESS), also coming in at €98 per megawatt hour and securing enough clean power for over 350,000 homes, with up to €45 million in community benefit contributions to be realised over the life of the scheme.
- The opening of the Small-Scale Renewable Electricity Support Scheme export tariff for applications in January 2025, offering communities, farmers, small businesses, and others an opportunity to generate income through solar and wind projects of up to 6MW.
- Rapid growth of the solar energy sector, reaching over 2.2GW installed, making it the third highest share of electricity generation for the country.
- Establishment by Taoiseach Micheál Martin of the Offshore Wind Energy Clearing House to accelerate delivery of offshore wind.
- Publication of the National Designated Maritime Area Plan (DMAP) Proposal for offshore renewable energy.
- An investment of €3.5 billion in Ireland’s electricity infrastructure across 2026-2030, as part of the revised National Development Plan.
- Publication of the general scheme for Private Wires – to unlock private sector investment in renewables infrastructure.
- Further enabling the emerging biomethane market via the Renewable Heat Obligation scheme.
In a related development, a new national communications campaign launched this week by the Department of Climate, Energy and the Environment highlights the benefits of renewable energy, placing people and communities at its centre and emphasising early engagement, careful planning and shared benefits.
The campaign – ‘Our Energy. Our Future’ – demonstrates how home-grown renewable electricity is said to be already creating jobs, warming homes, powering businesses and supporting community projects across Ireland.

















































