According to the Electric Power Annual by the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), solar power accounted for 3% of US electricity generation from all sources in 2020. In the agency's Short-Term Energy Outlook, it forecasts that solar will account for 4% of US electricity generation in 2021 and 5% in 2022.
In the Annual Energy Outlook 2021 (AEO2021) Reference case, which assumes no change in current laws and regulations, EIA projects that solar generation will make up 14% of the US total in 2035 and 20% in 2050. These data include electricity generated from both utility-scale (those of 1 MW or more generating capacity) and small-scale (less than 1 MW) solar facilities in the electric power, residential, commercial, and industrial sectors.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Monthly Energy Review, Electric Power Annual, Short-Term Energy Outlook,
Humans have been using solar energy for centuries and first produced solar-powered electricity in the United States in 1954. Currently, solar energy can generate electricity in two ways: solar photovoltaics (PV) and solar thermal.
Increases in small-scale solar, particularly in the commercial and residential sectors, drove much of the early growth in US solar electricity net generation. In 2011, small-scale solar accounted for 68% of total US solar electricity net generation. However, utility-scale solar generation increased substantially in the United States during the past decade as average construction costs for solar power plants fell.
In our long-term projections, the electric power sector continues to produce the most solar generation, increasing from 68% of total solar generation in 2020 to 78% in 2050. The growing share of utility-scale generation is due in part to the availability of a 10% Investment Tax Credit (ITC) after 2023; in contrast, the ITC for small-scale solar has expired.
The AEO2021’s projected share of solar generation is affected by assumptions about the installed and operating costs of other generating technologies, particularly in later years of the projection period when the projected trends in solar are increasingly influenced by economic factors rather than policy. In a sensitivity case in which natural gas prices are higher than in the Reference case (the Low Oil and Gas Supply case), solar generation reaches 25% of total generation by 2050, compared with 20% in the Reference case. In another sensitivity case in which installed costs of renewables are lower than in the Reference case (the Low Renewables Costs case), solar generation makes up 27% of total generation by 2050.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Electric Power Annual, Short-Term Energy Outlook, and Annual Energy Outlook
Principal contributors: Mickey Francis, Manussawee Sukunta
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