Renewable Energy Has Achieved Cost Parity: Utility-scale solar ($28-117/MWh) and onshore wind ($23-139/MWh) now consistently outcompete fossil fuels, with coal costing $68-166/MWh and natural gas $77-130/MWh, making renewables the most economical choice for new electricity. Renewable Energy Has Achieved Cost Parity: Utility-scale solar ($28-117/MWh) and onshore wind ($23-139/MWh) now consistently outcompete fossil fuels, with coal costing $68-166/MWh and natural gas $77-130/MWh, making renewables the most economical choice for new electricity. Different methods of electricity generation can incur a variety of different costs, which can be divided into three general categories: 1) wholesale costs, or all costs paid by utilities associated with acquiring and distributing electricity to consumers, 2) retail costs paid by consumers, and 3). Numbers calculated by financial advisory Lazard as of June 2025 estimate price ranges for the generation of one MWh of energy by different sources. While the data shows that it is always cheapest to produce electricity from fully depreciated facilities, renewable energy can nevertheless compete in. Renewables remain cost-competitive in the United States despite rising natural gas competitiveness, according to Lazard's 2025 “Levelized Cost of Energy+” report, which estimates combined cycle gas at $0. Even without tax incentives, solar and wind are beating fossil fuels such as oil and gas in the affordability department. A new analysis shows just how much of a gap there is between renewable energy sources and traditional ones. Total installed costs for renewable power decreased by more than 10% for all technologies between 2023 and 2024, except for offshore wind, where.