LONDON - Global investment in new clean energy capacity rose 1% last year to $282.2 billion, research by UNEP, Bloomberg New Energy Finance and the Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating Centre showed on Wednesday.

The United States invested $55.5 billion in 2019, up 28% from the year before as onshore wind developers rushed to take advantage of tax credits before their expected expiry, the report said.

Europe financed $54.6 billion, down 7% from 2018.

China's investment fell to its lowest level since 2013 at $83.4 billion due to continued government cutbacks on support for solar power.

More investment went into renewables last year than fossil fuel and nuclear technologies, the report said.

Globally, new coal-fired generation is estimated to have had $37 billion of investment last year; new gas-fired generation had $47 billion and $15 billion was invested in new nuclear generation.

In terms of capacity, 184 gigawatts (GW) of new clean energy was added last year, up 12% from 2018.

"The all-in cost of electricity continues to fall for wind and solar, thanks to technology improvements, economies of scale and fierce competition in auctions," the report said.

"Costs for electricity from new solar photovoltaic plants in the second half of 2019 were 83% lower than a decade earlier," it added.

Governments and companies around the world have committed to adding some 826 GW of new non-hydro renewable power capacity to 2030 at a likely cost of around $1 trillion, the report said.

However, this falls short of what is needed to help limit world temperature rise to less than 2 degrees Celsius.

The Covid-19 crisis has slowed down deal-making in renewables in recent months and this will affect investment levels in 2020. Governments will need to tailor their economic recovery programmes to speed up the phase-out of fossil fuels and deploy renewables, the report added.

(Reporting by Nina Chestney; Editing by Susan Fenton) ((nina.chestney@thomsonreuters.com; +44 (0)780 959 6528; Reuters Messaging: nina.chestney.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))