Sterawatt

Who is building the
energy transition?

Sterawatt identifies the companies, governments, and industries at the forefront of sustainable energy — and tracks whether their products, finances, and pipelines are moving the world fast enough to matter.

Energy Systems

We have options.

Humanity has developed and deployed energy systems across every major source. Each carries its own economics, infrastructure, and trade-offs.

Solar

1.6 TW

installed globally

Wind

1.1 TW

installed globally

Hydro

1.4 TW

installed globally

Nuclear

413 GW

installed globally

Natural Gas

39%

of electricity mix

Coal

36%

of electricity mix

Hydrogen

~90 Mt

produced annually

Geothermal

15 GW

installed globally

Storage

45 GWh

grid-scale deployed

The Debate

Where agreement ends.

On cost, environment, safety, reliability, and politics — the same data produces different conclusions depending on what you weight and how you measure.

Cost

Levelised cost comparisons depend heavily on location, grid integration, and what you include — capital, fuel, decommissioning, or system-wide balancing costs.

Environment

Lifecycle emissions, land use, water consumption, and mining impact vary by technology and methodology. The accounting choices change the conclusion.

Safety

Deaths per terawatt-hour, accident probability, and long-term health effects are measured differently across industries — and weighted differently by different audiences.

Reliability

Intermittency, baseload requirements, storage capacity, and grid resilience mean different technologies suit different grid architectures and geographies.

Political will

Energy choices intersect with employment, energy security, trade relationships, and domestic politics. The same technology looks different depending on where you sit.

Our position

The transition matters.
The data shows
if it is happening.

Sterawatt believes the world needs to transition to sustainable energy. That is our starting position. What we track, report, and surface is evidence for or against that transition actually occurring at the scale and pace it needs to.

We do not pick winners between wind, nuclear, or solar. We do measure whether clean capacity is growing, whether the companies building it are financially healthy enough to sustain that growth, and whether their collective trajectory points in the right direction.

Who It Is For

The transition affects everyone.

Different people need different lenses on the same shift.

Citizens

You pay energy bills. You vote. You hear conflicting claims about what is safe, affordable, and sustainable. Sterawatt gives you the data to ask better questions of the people making decisions on your behalf.

Students & Researchers

Energy systems underpin modern economies, geopolitics, and climate. Sterawatt maps how they work, how they compare, and where the transition is headed — grounded in real data, not headlines.

Policymakers & Planners

Decisions on energy infrastructure carry decade-long consequences. Sterawatt tracks what is being built, by whom, at what cost, and with what outcomes — so choices are grounded in what is happening, not just what is projected.

Business & Investors

The energy transition is a capital reallocation event. Sterawatt tracks corporate commitments, sovereign strategies, and sector-level shifts — giving you the context to assess exposure, opportunity, and risk.

Coverage

The front-runners we follow.

Each entity is tracked because its products, capital deployment, or policy commitments have material bearing on the pace of the energy transition. Together, their trajectories form a collective health signal for whether the transition is accelerating or stalling.

Track. Analyse. Decide.

The energy transition is the defining infrastructure shift of this century.

Follow it with the data it deserves.