A report on Global green energy says that investment in hydro, solar and wind power was almost double that of coal and gas in 2015.
Last year almost 147GW of capacity was created, which is pretty impressive, but take care. Capacity is not the same as usable energy 24/7 or baseload; optimistic estimates put that at about 30%. Having said that, 45GW or thereabouts is nothing to sneer at, but a couple of other things need to be looked at before we get the Champagne opened.
For the intermittent producers a lot more work has to be done with storage technologies so that the energy produced can be used when the Sun doesn't shine or the wind doesn't blow. We are currently light years away from grid level storage. The nearest we have come is pumped hydro, a technology nearly 100 years old.
We are also woefully short of investment, research and application of geothermal and wave energy schemes. These can produce the baseload missing from wind and solar, and as an island nation surrounded by seas with some of the strongest tides on earth we should be doing so much more.
Obviously a lot more work needs to be done but we should not let that spoil the good news.