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January 02, 2024
By Zachary Shahan

 

21 Gigawatts of US Coal to Retire in Next 3 Years, 88–211 Gigawatts of Solar to Join Grid

I just wrapped up reports on new power capacity in the United States and electricity generation in the United States. Clearly, the trend is toward more renewables and less coal. Aside from showing power capacity additions from month to month by energy source, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) includes a section in its monthly reports that shows expected power capacity retirements in the coming 3 years. It’s a fascinating forecast to look at.

First, though, let’s set the stage for total installed power capacity in the United States. Renewable energy sources have risen to about 30.7% of total installed power capacity across the country in October 2023, based on FERC data and a CleanTechnica estimate for small-scale solar. That’s up from 29% of total installed power capacity across the country in October 2022. Solar power now accounts for about 10.2% of US power capacity, and wind power accounts for another 11.3%. Hydropower accounts for about 7.7%, while nuclear power accounts for 7.8%.

The big dog, fossil gas (aka “natural gas”), accounts for about 42.8% of US power capacity, down from 43.1% in October 2022. The former big dog, coal, is down to 15.8%, compared to 17% in October 2022. But let’s look back a bit further on coal and also look forward a few years.

Coal accounted for 30.4% of US power capacity back in 2010, and then 19.7% in 2020. Being down to 15.8% in October 2023, it looks like we will see an even more significant drop in coal’s share of the power capacity market in this decade. It looks like coal will be below 10% of the market by 2030.

And here’s the real clincher: Look at FERC’s forecast for new power capacity additions and expected retirements (below).

Wind power capacity is forecasted to grow by 20 GW to 62 GW, while net change in fossil gas power capacity is expected to be somewhere between 2 GW and 12 GW.
And all of that is just the forecast for the next 3 years.
Hello, sunshine! The 2020s is looking to be another great decade for the transition to clean renewable energy.

Total US Power Capacity by Source — October 2023 vs October 2022

Total power capacity (in gigawatts) as of October 2023 vs. October 2022. Official data from FERC covering large-scale power plant additions. *Small-scale solar figure is an estimate based on SEIA data and FERC data.

 

 

 

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