Green Spain Initiative · 2026 Report

Spain's sun lights up the future

An educational analysis of the 2030 carbon-footprint targets and the role of renewable energy in the sustainable development of our country.

Renewable electricity share
55%
Average sunshine hours per year
2,500 h
Emissions target for 2030
−55%
Local energy communities
+4×
Panoramic view of solar panels and green mountains on a clear day in Spain

Green Spain Initiative · 2026 Report

«Clean energy, a stronger Spain»

Informe 2026

The world is changing and the planet's resources are running out. With more than 2,500 hours of sunshine per year and a privileged geography, Spain plays a decisive role in the transition towards an energy model based on renewable sources. This educational report gathers public data and recent guidance to help readers understand the change under way.

Global warming and shared responsibility

Global warming is no longer a distant forecast: it is a measurable reality. Heatwaves, prolonged droughts and forest fires have reminded us, summer after summer, that the protection of the environment is a daily task. The European Union has reaffirmed the goal of cutting net greenhouse-gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 from 1990 levels.

Spain has aligned its National Integrated Energy and Climate Plan with that roadmap. The transition requires a change of mindset: saving water, recycling materials, rethinking mobility and, above all, gradually replacing fossil fuels with clean sources. It is a shared effort across citizens, public administrations and Spanish energy companies, oriented to the protection of the natural environment and to the development of future generations.

Wind turbines installed on a mountain range in northern Spain at sunrise
Wind farm in northern Spain — landscape protection and local development.

Spain's role in renewable energy

Renewable generation in Spain surpassed 55% of the national electricity mix in 2025, according to official data from the system operator. Solar photovoltaic leads the growth, followed by onshore wind and, in its early steps, offshore wind in Atlantic waters. Regions such as Andalusia, Extremadura, Castile-La Mancha and Aragón concentrate most of the solar farms, while Galicia and Castile and León lead wind deployment.

The rollout of local energy communities — neighbourhood cooperatives sharing solar self-consumption — has multiplied by four in the last three years. This citizen participation strengthens rural development, helps keep populations in small villages and reduces household energy bills. The protection of the landscape is also at the heart of the debate: plants are designed with ecological corridors, native vegetation and buffer zones for wildlife.

Photovoltaic solar field in Extremadura

The future of Agriculture 5.0

Spanish farming is going through a second revolution. Moisture sensors, connected weather stations, monitoring drones and management software help optimise water use and reduce fertilisers by up to 30%. Agriculture 5.0 combines the tradition of olive groves, vineyards and Mediterranean orchards with digital tools that protect the soil and foster biodiversity.

The future lies in smaller, well-connected farms that adapt to a changing climate. The protection of native varieties, crop rotation and the use of solar energy for irrigation are now routine practices on many farms. Short, local food chains shorten carbon footprints and dignify farm work.

Fundolentra documents these initiatives with an educational, socially responsible focus. We believe that understanding is the first step to participating: the better we grasp the challenges, the more we can contribute, from our homes, schools and neighbourhoods, to a stronger and cleaner Spain.

Mediterranean vineyards in La Rioja with sustainable irrigation systems

España Verde

Three values that guide us

Development

We accompany the sustainable development of rural and urban communities with clear, verifiable information.

Future

We think about the future of the next generations: clean air, available water and living landscapes.

Protection

Protecting biodiversity and traditional trades is part of the ecological transition.

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Fundolentra

Fundolentra is an educational initiative based in Madrid devoted to environmental communication, renewable energy and sustainable agriculture in Spain.

«Clean energy, a stronger Spain.»

Contact

Madrid Commercial Registry, Volume 41,328, Folio 112, Sheet M-734,512.

Tax ID (CIF): B-87654321 · Year of incorporation: 2021.

Registered at the Madrid Environmental Entities Registry, no. REA-2021/0934.

Applicable jurisdiction: Courts of Madrid, Spain.

© 2026 Fundolentra. All rights reserved.