What LCOE Means
LCOE stands for Levelized Cost of Energy. It is the total cost of building and operating a power plant, divided by the total electricity it produces over its lifetime. The result is a single number, expressed in dollars per megawatt-hour ($/MWh), that lets you compare any electricity source against any other on a level playing field.
Comparing the cost of a solar farm to a coal plant is not straightforward. A solar farm costs a lot upfront but nothing to fuel. A coal plant costs less to build but requires a constant supply of fuel and generates emissions that carry financial risk. LCOE solves this by collapsing all costs, capital, fuel, operations, maintenance, decommissioning, and financing, into a single per-unit figure across the entire operating life.
The metric was developed by energy economists to enable apples-to-apples comparison across technologies with fundamentally different cost structures. It is published annually by IRENA, Lazard, the IEA, and BloombergNEF. When energy analysts, investors, and policymakers discuss which technology "wins on cost," they are almost always referencing LCOE data.