Solar, battery storage to lead new U.S. generating capacity additions
This growth highlights the importance of battery storage when used with renewable energy, helping to balance supply and demand and improve grid stability. Energy storage systems
Renewable electricity – Renewables 2025 – Analysis
Renewables 2025 - Analysis and key findings. A report by the International Energy Agency.
Strategic design of wind energy and battery storage for efficient and
This study investigates the techno economic benefits of integrating Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) into wind power plants by developing and evaluating optimized hybrid operation...
U.S. Wind Power 2025: Capacity, IRA, Renewable Growth
U.S. Wind Power 2025 drives record capacity additions, with FERC data showing robust renewable energy growth, IRA incentives, onshore and offshore projects, utility-scale generation, grid
Wind, Solar, Storage Heat Up in 2025
Dozens of large-scale solar, wind, and storage projects will come online worldwide in 2025, representing several gigawatts of new capacity.
U.S. developers report half of new electric generating capacity will
Although developers have added natural gas-fired capacity each year since then, other technologies such as wind, solar, and battery storage have become more prevalent options for new
2025 Energy Outlook: Trends in Solar, Wind, Storage & Grid | FFI
Explore what 2025 holds for clean energy—from solar and wind growth to storage innovations and grid modernization. Key insights from FFI Solutions.
US Electricity 2025 – Special Report
The US clean electricity transition continued as wind and solar generated more than coal for the first time. Electricity demand growth sped up and solar generation rose more quickly than gas
Solar, batteries, wind to make up 93% of 2025 US
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) projects 32.5 GW of solar, 18.2 GW of energy storage, and 7.7 GW of wind will be deployed this year.
EIA: 99%+ of new US capacity in 2026 will be solar, wind + storage
Solar, wind, and batteries are set to supply virtually all net new US generating capacity in 2026, according to the latest EIA data.
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