May 2026
Report No. 13 Electricity Generation in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

In January 2026, Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) generated 171 TWh of electricity, with hydropower remaining the dominant technology. This outcome is associated with greater water availability and a reduction in the system’s hydrological constraints, favoring lower marginal-cost dispatch and the partial displacement of thermal generation with higher variable costs.

Despite the greater hydroelectric contribution, the fossil thermal segment maintained a significant share (31.3% of total generation), led by natural gas, which continues to consolidate its role as a flexibility resource for load following and the provision of ancillary services (reserve and regulation). On a month-on-month basis, regional electricity generation increased by 9.6% compared to December 2025, driven mainly by hydropower; at the same time, declines were recorded in several non-conventional renewable sources (geothermal -36%, solar -30%, and wind -11%).

In the year-on-year comparison, January 2026 stood slightly above January 2025, with a 1.2% increase, reflecting marginal growth in the overall system balance. By source, dispatch patterns were marked by an increase in hydropower generation (+10.8 TWh) and significant declines in solar (-11.2 TWh) and natural gas (-8.0 TWh), resulting in a slightly positive net balance (+1.3 TWh) due to the offsetting effect between increases and reductions.

Finally, the region maintained a predominantly renewable energy matrix, with a renewability index of 66% in January 2026. Of the 27 member countries of OLACDE, 12 exceeded the regional index, led by Paraguay (100%), Costa Rica (97.8%), Uruguay (96.5%), Ecuador (91.6%), Belize (90.9%), Colombia (88.7%), Brazil (88.5%), and Venezuela (87.7%).

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