Report: Solar could power 40% of U.S. electricity by 2035

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Solar energy has the potential to supply up to 40% of the nation’s electricity within 15 years—a 10-fold increase over current solar output, but one that would require massive changes in U.S. policy and billions of dollars in federal investment to modernize the nation’s electric grid, a new federal report says.

The report by the Energy Department’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy says the United States would need to quadruple its annual solar capacity — and continue to increase it year by year — as it shifts to a renewable-dominant grid in order to address the existential threat posed by climate change.

The report released Wednesday is not intended as a policy statement or administration goal, officials said. Instead, it is “designed to guide and inspire the next decade of solar innovation by helping us answer questions like: How fast does solar need to increase capacity and to what level?” said Becca Jones-Albertus, director of the Energy Department’s solar energy technologies office.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said in a statement that the study “illuminates the fact that solar, our cheapest and fastest-growing source of clean energy, could produce enough electricity to power all of the homes in the U.S. by 2035 and employ as many as 1.5 million people in the process.”

The report comes as President Joe Biden declared climate change has become “everybody’s crisis ” during a visit to neighborhoods flooded by the remnants of Hurricane Ida. Biden warned Tuesday that it’s time for America to get serious about the “code red” danger posed by climate change or face increasing loss of life and property.

“We can’t turn it back very much, but we can prevent it from getting worse,” Biden said before touring a New Jersey neighborhood ravaged by severe flooding caused by Ida. “We don’t have any more time.”

The natural disaster has given Biden an opening to push Congress to approve his plan to spend $1 trillion to fortify infrastructure nationwide, including electrical grids, water and sewer systems, to better defend against extreme weather. The legislation has cleared the Senate and awaits a House vote.

The U.S. installed a record 15 gigawatts of solar generating capacity in 2020, and solar now represents just over 3% of the current electricity supply, the Energy Department said.

The “Solar Futures Study,” prepared by DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, shows that, by 2035, the country would need to quadruple its yearly solar capacity additions and provide 1,000 gigawatts of power to a renewable-dominant grid. By 2050, solar energy could provide 1,600 gigawatts on a zero-carbon grid—producing more electricity than consumed in all residential and commercial buildings in the country today, the report said. Decarbonizing the entire energy system could result in as much as 3,000 gigawatts of solar by 2050 due to increased electrification in the transportation, buildings, and industrial sectors, the report said.

The report assumes that clean-energy policies currently being debated in Congress will drive a 95% reduction from 2005 levels in the grid’s carbon dioxide emissions by 2035, and a 100% reduction by 2050.

But even without aggressive action from Congress—an outcome that is far from certain in an evenly-divided House and Senate — installed solar capacity could still see a seven-fold increase by 2050, relative to 2005, the report said.

“Even without a concerted policy effort, market forces and technology advances will drive significant deployment of solar and other clean energy technologies as well as substantial decarbonization,” the report said, citing falling costs for solar panels and other factors.

To achieve 40% solar power by 2035, the U.S. must install an average of 30 gigwatts of solar capacity per year between now and 2025—double its current rate—and 60 gigawatts per year from 2025 to 2030, the report said.

Those goals far exceed what even the solar industry has been pushing for as the Biden administration and Congress debate climate and clean-energy legislation. The Solar Energy Industries Association has urged a framework for solar to achieve 20% of U.S. electricity generation by 2030.

Abigail Ross Hopper, the group’s president and CEO, said the DOE study “makes it clear that we will not achieve the levels of decarbonization that we need without significant policy advances.”

The solar group sent a letter to Congress Wednesday from nearly 750 companies spelling out recommended policy changes. “We believe with those policies and a determined private sector, the Biden administration’s goals are definitely achievable,” Hopper said.

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12 thoughts on “Report: Solar could power 40% of U.S. electricity by 2035

    1. tell me you know nothing about agriculture or renewable energy without telling me you nothing about agriculture or renewable energy… Ready, go

  1. Solar energy is by definition an unreliable source of energy. Why would we want to rely so much on unreliables when that could mean brownouts and blackouts on a regular basis?

    It is lunacy to want less reliable power long-term.

    1. Battery storage for one thing. Also consider distributed energy on industrial buildings. IKEA gets over 1,300,000 kWH per year with rooftop solar. Innovation is coming in wind power.

    1. Also see today’s announcement about Bob Laikin’s Novus II acquisition of a company working on grid-scale storage.

  2. All the above is good including solar. Not sure if it’s good to rely solely on it at some point. Really thought by now we’d have lots of nuclear type of energies without all the danger of nuclear. It’ great to see us continue to innovate an hopefully lead the world in energy technology!

  3. Solar is and will be part of an all-of-the-above solution involving other renewables, nuclear, and probably some little bit of fossil fuels, and battery storage for when the sun doesn’t shine and the winds don’t blow. Put solar on roofs, parking lots, and on land that is not suitable for agriculture (brown fields, former strip mines, etc.). Put it on retention ponds, canals, etc., and reduce evaporation (thereby saving lots of valuable water). It’s being done successfully now.

    1. ^^^This. There is absolutely no need to take productive Midwestern farmland and “grow” only solar panels and warehouses (as we seem to be doing in Central Indiana).

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