IRENA Policy Advisory: Renewables for Energy Security and Resilience
Summary
IRENA published a policy advisory recommending immediate, mid-term, and long-term actions for policymakers to enhance energy security and resilience through renewable energy deployment. The brief highlights that 692 GW of renewable power capacity was added globally in 2025, with over 85% of new renewables now cheaper than fossil fuel alternatives. Since 2010, solar costs have fallen 87%, onshore wind 55%, and battery storage 93%. IRENA Director-General Francesco La Camera commented that the energy crisis demonstrates the strategic case for renewables as a national security imperative.
“The current crisis clearly demonstrates the strategic case for renewables as a national security imperative”
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IRENA issued a policy advisory outlining immediate actions (deploying distributed renewables, reducing energy demand through mandates, fast-tracking time-of-use tariffs, implementing fiscal measures for electrification, accelerating solar-battery mini-grids, and incentivizing two/three-wheeler electrification), mid-term actions (fast-tracking renewable and grid projects, expanding battery storage and grid enhancements), and long-term actions (establishing clear policy frameworks to attract investment, integrating electrification into national planning, and strengthening domestic supply chains).\n\nGovernments and energy sector stakeholders may consider these recommendations when shaping energy policy. The advisory does not create binding compliance obligations but signals IRENA's view on best practices for energy security. The recommendations are particularly relevant for policymakers in countries currently reliant on fossil fuel imports, with IRENA citing Spain, Portugal, China, India, and Pakistan as examples of countries where renewables are already reducing import dependence.
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New IRENA policy advisory shows strategic role of renewables for energy security and resilience; recommends actions for policy makers to address today’s energy crisis
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, 13 April 2026 – The strategic deployment of renewables has provided enhanced resilience in the face of the current energy crisis by a number of countries, according to a new policy advisory from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).
The brief, aimed at policy makers responding to the disruption in international energy markets, suggests a set of immediate and longer-term actions to insulate countries and communities from the worst effects of the crisis, and steer their economic recovery toward greater energy security and resilience.
Renewables are already reducing dependence on fossil fuel imports across countries, the new brief finds—from Spain and Portugal in Europe, to China, India and Pakistan in Asia. Globally, renewable power capacity continues to grow at record speed, with 692 GW added in 2025.
Furthermore, falling costs have transformed the economics of power generation. More than 85% of new renewables are now cheaper than fossil fuel alternatives. Since 2010, the cost of solar has fallen by 87%, onshore wind by 55% and battery storage by 93%. Meanwhile, ‘firm’ renewables, which combine wind or solar with battery storage, provide 24/7 power at lower costs than most fossil fuel-fired alternatives.
“The current crisis clearly demonstrates the strategic case for renewables as a national security imperative”, commented IRENA Director-General Francesco La Camera. “There is an opportunity to prioritise actions that enhance long-term energy stability. Governments must urgently consider targeted interventions to steer investment and emergency responses towards accelerating the deployment of renewable power and the electrification of energy-consuming processes and sectors.”
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East reiterates the inherent structural weakness and vulnerability of national energy systems that remain reliant upon fossil fuels, and markets where the costs of oil and gas are highly influential on electricity prices.
The consequences will extend beyond energy markets and supply chains to affect whole economies, influencing inflation and economic activity simultaneously, with most pronounced effects likely for the most vulnerable communities around the world.
La Camera added: “Country examples in IRENA’s advisory confirm the resilience of renewables. They show the growing role that renewables can play in strengthening energy system resilience and security, reducing exposure to fossil fuel price volatility and supporting long-term economic stability.”
The brief advises policy makers to:
- Facilitate the deployment of distributed renewables, leveraging cross-sector partnerships to mobilise rapid responses; provide financial and logistical support to fast-track development.
- Use public information campaigns and mandates to reduce energy demand.
- Fast-track time-of-use tariff adoption to enable consumers to shift their electricity consumption to times where renewable supply on grids is high and prices are low.
- Implement fiscal measures such as grants, subsidies or tax rebates in support of electrification.
- Accelerate solar PV–battery hybrid mini-grids in off-grid and weak-grid remote areas.
- Accelerate two/three-wheeler electrification in emerging economies; incentivise electrification of public transport through financial and fiscal support; encourage car-pooling where appropriate. Mid-term actions focus on accelerating renewable deployment while strengthening resilience and investment conditions. They include fast-tracking renewable and grid projects, ring-fencing funding and adapting policies to inflation and supply chain pressures. Expanding battery storage, demand-side measures and grid enhancements will improve flexibility and enable more solar and wind. Incentives should support heating, electrification, EV infrastructure and sustainable aviation fuel.
In the long-term, clear policy frameworks are needed to attract investment, integrate electrification into national planning and strengthen domestic supply chains. Facilitating hybrid projects, supporting industrial electrification, expanding mini-grids, and linking fossil fuel support to meeting renewable targets will be key.
Read the full IRENA policy advisory Renewables: From Energy Crisis to Energy Security.
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