Nearly Two-Thirds of New Generating Capacity in 2015
from Renewable Sources
By
It was quite a year for renewable energy.
2015 set the record for new electrical generation placed in service from solar, wind, hydropower, geothermal and biomass according to the latest Energy Infrastructure Update report released by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Office of Energy Projects.
2015 set the record for new electrical generation placed in service from solar, wind, hydropower, geothermal and biomass according to the latest Energy Infrastructure Update report released by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Office of Energy Projects.
Of the 16,485 megawatts (MW) of new generating
capacity in 2015, 63.85 percent, nearly two-thirds, came from renewable
sources.
Wind capacity tops 2015
Wind energy was the largest source of
new capacity last year, with 69 new “units” of wind providing 7,977MW of new
generating capacity, nearly half the annual total. By contract 50 new
units of natural gas brought 5,942 MW of new capacity to the grid, about a
third less than for wind.
238 new units of solar energy put 2,042
MW capacity online, 305 MW came from biomass, 153 MW from hydropower and 2
geothermal units brought 48 MW of new generating capacity.
Nuclear, coal and
oil lack behind in new generating capacity
The FERC report shows no new capacity in 2015 from nuclear power,
15 MW from oil and just 3 MW from a single unit of coal. New electrical
generating capacity from all renewable energy sources in 2015 – 10,525 MW – is
over 700 times greater than the contribution from oil and more than 3,500 times
more than that from coal.
Renewable share of energy continues its exponential climb
The share of energy provided by
renewable sources is 17.83 percent of the total installed operating generation
capacity in the United States.
The share of non-hydro renewables is 9.27
percent, exceeding the 8.56 percent share from conventional hydro. At 108.34
GW of total installed electrical capacity, non-hydro renewables has now
eclipsed that of nuclear power (107.03 GW).
When the the FERC published it first Energy Infrastructure
Update in December of 2010, renewable energy sources accounted
for only 13.71 percent of total installed operating generation capacity.
In the
past five years solar’s energy share has increased 12-fold and wind power has
nearly doubled. In this same period coal’s share of US generating capacity has
dropped from 30.37 percent to 26.16 percent.
“If it weren’t already obvious, the latest FERC data confirm that the era of coal, oil, and nuclear power is rapidly drawing to a close,” noted Ken Bossong, Executive Director of the SUN DAY Campaign. “The future – in fact, the present – has become renewable energy!”