The U.S. Energy Information Administration has projected that 351 gigawatts of new electric generating capacity will be added to the U.S. grid between 2013 and 2040. This projected new capacity, most of which EIA expects to be fueled by natural gas, will replace older power plants as they retire, as well as modestly increasing the country's net installed capacity.
EIA's forecast implies a growth rate well below recent annual levels observed. Under EIA's projection, capacity additions through 2016 will average 16 GW per year. But from 2017 through 2022, EIA expects
additions of less than 9 GW per year as the existing
generating fleet will be sufficient to meet expected demand growth in
most regions. From 2025 to 2040, annual additions increase to an average
14 GW per year, but remain below recent levels.
EIA expects that natural gas will be the primary fuel source for the projected added capacity, accounting for 73% of capacity additions in the reference case (or 255 GW).
Renewables will account for 24% of the new capacity (or 83 MW). Of renewable capacity additions, 39 GW are solar photovoltaic (PV) systems (60% of
which are rooftop installations). Another 28 GW are wind, most of which will occur
by 2015 to qualify for federal renewable energy production tax credits).
New nuclear capacity will total about 3% (or 10 GW), including 6 GW of plants currently
under construction and 4 GW projected after 2027.
EIA also projects that 1% of capacity additions (or less than 3 GW) will come from coal, with more than 80% of that total currently under
construction. EIA notes that federal and state environmental regulations and
uncertainty about future limits on greenhouse gas emissions reduce the
attractiveness and economic merits of coal-fired plants.
Like any forecast, EIA's projections rest upon a series of assumptions. Under alternative cases, we might experience actual capacity additions that differ from EIA's forecasts. Nevertheless, the EIA Annual Energy Outlook 2014 offers a glimpse of changes to the portfolio composing our energy mix may come in the next decades.
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