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Climate Trends to Shape 2025

The Citizen

|

January 03, 2025

Coal-Black Swans: With Rising Demand, Fossil Fuel and Nuclear Make Comeback

Climate Trends to Shape 2025

From record solar installations to rising electric vehicle sales, the world is in many ways ramping up the fight against global warming.

Yet there are coal-black swans waiting to disrupt the green transition this year. From the US to Japan, power demand is expected to significantly increase as data centers demand more electricity for artificial intelligence. This is forcing some utilities to rethink the phase-out dates of their fossil-fuel power stations. (It's also causing nuclear energy to have a revival too.)

All of this is happening as president-elect Donald Trump prepares to take office. Trump has already promised to end what he calls Washington's "green new scam." On day one he's pledged to scrap offshore wind projects, which would be another blow to an industry plagued by bottlenecks. He's also vowed to abandon the Paris Agreement, which calls for nations to limit global warming to ideally 1.5°C before the end of the century.

Even before Trump enters the White House, the planet is showing worrying vital signs with scientists virtually certain 2024 was the warmest year on record and the first in which global temperature rise exceeded 1.5°C.

What more can we expect in 2025? Along with BloombergNEF analysts, we have selected 15 trends that will shape the future of the planet this year.

Solar installation rate slows

The solar market grew by 35% in 2024, but BloombergNEF expects global installations to only increase by 11% this year. As solar makes up a bigger proportion of countries' electricity mix, networks will struggle to integrate surplus daytime power into their grids. Still, solar will remain the largest source of new generation added to grids around the world in 2025.

Coal gets a life extension

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Boy's killer faces new trial

US prosecutors asked a judge on Tuesday to retry the main suspect in the infamous New York kidnap and murder of a six-year-old boy 46 years ago.

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SA weighs 20% tax on online gambling

South Africa is considering imposing a 20% tax on online gambling to curb its rapid growth and address related social harms.

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R6m reasons to hit jackpot

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Pension fund collapse exposes national rot

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We deserve more Tests

After an incredible two-Test shellacking of India on their home turf, surely the Proteas Test team deserve to be respected - and rewarded?

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Victory over India was team effort

It takes a special bunch of players to beat India in their backyard in Test cricket.

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Better life derailed by looting

There has been an explosion on the looting express.

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Trump turns turkey pardon into political roast

Donald Trump turned Washington’s fluffiest tradition into something a little tougher to carve on Tuesday - swapping holiday cheer for political score-settling as he pardoned two turkeys in the annual White House Thanksgiving ceremony.

time to read

2 mins

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Tshituka: Sharks in ‘a good space’

Despite their coaching shakeup, poor form and Springbok duties, Sharks captain Vincent Tshituka said the team is “in a good space” mentally and preparation-wise ahead of Saturday night's clash with Connacht.

time to read

1 mins

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Preparing for combat

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te said yesterday his government will propose $40 billion (about R686 billion) in additional defence spending over eight years, as the democratic island seeks to deter a potential Chinese invasion.

time to read

1 min

November 27, 2025

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