The Economics in One Number
Solar photovoltaic electricity is the cheapest new source of power ever measured. The global weighted-average LCOE for utility-scale solar PV reached $0.044/kWh in 2023, down 89% from $0.445/kWh in 2010. In optimal locations with strong solar irradiance, generation costs have fallen below $0.020/kWh. These are unsubsidized figures.
That single metric, levelized cost of energy, captures everything: capital expenditure, financing, maintenance, panel degradation, and decommissioning, spread across every kilowatt-hour the plant will ever produce. When IRENA, Lazard, or BloombergNEF publish their annual cost reports, LCOE is the number that settles the argument.
The argument is settled. Solar PV now undercuts new-build gas in most markets. In 60% of global electricity markets, building brand-new solar and wind is cheaper than continuing to run existing, fully amortized coal and gas plants. Not cheaper than building new fossil plants. Cheaper than operating the ones already paid for.
This guide lays out the full data picture: how costs fell, where deployment stands, what storage adds to the equation, and what the learning curve tells us about the next decade. Every claim cites a source. Every number is traceable.