The United States installed 32.4 GW of solar energy in 2023, a 51% increase from 2022. This is according to the “U.S. Solar Market Insight 2023 Year-in-Review” report released by SEIA and Wood Mackenize.
Solar accounted for 53% of all new electric generating capacity added to the grid last year, the first time a renewable energy source has accounted for over 50% of annual capacity additions.
“If we stay the course with our federal clean energy policies, total solar deployment will quadruple over the next 10 years,” said SEIA president and CEO Abigail Ross Hopper. “The Inflation Reduction Act is supercharging solar deployment and having a material impact on our economy, helping America’s solar module manufacturing base grow 89% in 2023. We must protect and optimize the policies that are driving these investments and creating jobs, and the stakes in the upcoming election couldn’t be higher.”
Total U.S. solar capacity is expected to grow to 673 GW by 2034, enough to power more than 100 million homes.
The report includes forecast scenarios that show how policy and economic factors could impact the solar market. The U.S. solar industry currently faces several uncertainties, including policy outcomes associated with the upcoming presidential election. The scenarios consider various factors including interest rates, tax credit financing, trade policy, supply chain availability and interconnection, amongst others, over the next 10 years. There is a 200-GW difference between the high- and low-case forecasts by 2034.
“A high case for U.S. solar with increased supply chain stability, more tax credit financing and lower interest rates would increase our outlook 17%,” said Michelle Davis, head of global solar at Wood Mackenzie and lead author of the report. “A low case with supply chain constraints, less tax credit financing and static interest rates would decrease our outlook 24%. Various policy and economic outcomes will have big implications for the U.S. solar industry.”
Every solar market segment saw year-over-year growth in 2023, bringing total installed solar capacity in the United States to 177 GW. The utility-scale sector alone added 22.5 GW of new capacity, while nearly 800,000 Americans added solar to their homes.
Energy storage use continues to grow across the country. In 2023, solar + storage accounted for 13% of residential installations and 5% of non-residential installations. In 2024, 25% of new residential installations and 10% of non-residential installations will have storage.
Texas led the nation for new solar installations with 6.5 GW, eclipsing California for the second time in the last three years. California’s residential solar market will struggle in 2024 after changes to net metering policies take effect, contributing to a projected 36% decline across all segments in the state.
Colorado and Ohio are among the top 10 solar states in 2023 for the first time in over a decade, while Wisconsin made its debut appearance in the top 10. More than half of U.S. states have 1 GW of total installed solar capacity.
News item from SEIA
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