The Grid’s Verdict in 2025

Feb 9, 2026

Highlights

  • Through November 2025, U.S. utilities added 39.3 GW of new capacity.
  • Solar accounted for 22.2 GW of the new capacity.
  • Batteries contributed 13.4 GW of the new capacity.
  • Solar and batteries made up roughly 90% of net additions.
  • Coal capacity shrank by 4.1 GW.
  • The grid expansion was driven by market economicsโ€”cost, speed, and risk.
  • Developers chose solar-battery configurations that were financially viable.
  • This shift occurred despite a fossil fuel-friendly administration.
  • In 2025, overall U.S. energy consumption remained 83% fossil fuels.
  • Petroleum accounted for 38% of U.S. energy consumption.
  • Natural gas accounted for 36% of U.S. energy consumption.
  • Coal accounted for 9% of U.S. energy consumption.
  • The marginal megawatt shifted decisively toward renewables and storage in 2025.

A year when markets, not manifestos, set Americaโ€™s power mix. Americaโ€™s power grid has a habit of ignoring political noise. In 2025, it did so decisively. As of the latest verified U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) data available in February 2026, covering activity through November 2025, U.S. utilities added 39.3 gigawatts (GW) of new utility-scale generating capacity. The composition of that buildโ€”what actually went into the ground, not what was promised in press releasesโ€”is the story.

What Was Actually Built

Through November 2025, the numbers look like this:

  • Utility-scale solar: +22.2 GW
  • Grid-scale battery storage: +13.4 GW
  • Wind: +4.2 GW
  • Natural gas: +4.1 GW
  • Coal: โ€“4.1 GW (net retirements exceeded additions)

In other words, solar and batteries together accounted for roughly 90% of net capacity additions through November. Coal did not merely stagnate; it shrank. Natural gas grew, but modestly. Nuclear did not re-enter the picture in any meaningful capacity sense.

These are not forecasts. They are reported installations.

The Meaning of the Mix

Solar was the backbone of growth, batteries the quiet enabler. Taken together, they formed a generation model that produces power when the sun shines and stores it for when it does not. This pairingโ€”rather than any ideological preferenceโ€”has become the default choice for utilities adding capacity.

Wind continued to grow, but at a slower pace than in prior years, reflecting permitting delays and supply-chain friction. Natural gas retained its role as a flexible resource, but it did not dominate new builds. Coalโ€™s role, meanwhile, continued its long retreat.

The gridโ€™s center of gravity did not move because of policy speeches. It moved because this configuration cleared on cost, speed, and risk.

Politics and Physics

The results sit uneasily alongside the national political conversation. By late 2025, the rhetoric in Washingtonโ€”especially in the first year of a second Trump administrationโ€”tilted heavily toward fossil fuels, deregulation, and โ€œenergy dominance.โ€ Yet the grid told a different story.

Developers did not respond to slogans. They responded to balance sheets, interconnection queues, and state-level procurement mandates. Solar projects could be financed quickly. Batteries could be sited close to load. Gas plants faced longer timelines, rising capital costs, and uncertain utilization. Coal offered neither cost nor regulatory certainty.

The grid did not revolt. It simply kept building what worked.

Nuclear: Movement Without Megawatts

Nuclear energy made headlines in 2025, but not in capacity tables. The EIAโ€™s monthly data show only marginal changesโ€”consistent with uprates and accounting adjustments, not new reactors.

Of course that does not mean nuclear stood still. Regulators approved key design and licensing milestones for advanced and small modular reactors, and groundwork continued for the potential restart of previously shuttered plants. But in 2025, nuclear policy moved faster than nuclear steel.

The Less Obvious Consequence: Materials Trump Fuel

A solar-and-storage grid is not fuel-light; it is materials-heavy.

Solar panels may not consume large quantities of rare earths, but the system they enableโ€”electrification of transport, industry, and defenseโ€”does. Electric motors, wind turbines, robotics, and military hardware rely on permanent magnets made from neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and related elements.

China still dominates rare-earth processing and magnet manufacturing. By building a grid that favors electrification, the United States deepens its exposure to precisely the supply chains it does not yet control. The contradiction is structural, not ideological.

The Other Constraint: Wires

There is also a more prosaic bottleneck: transmission. Much of the new solar capacity added in 2025 sits far from demand centers. High-voltage lines are required to move that power. Yet only a few hundred miles of major transmission were completed nationwideโ€”far short of what grid planners say is needed.

Without faster permitting and construction, the grid risks assembling generation it cannot fully use. Infrastructure, like energy, fails at its narrowest point.

Then for another article what country manages much of solar/photovoltaic production?

A Quiet Verdict

The lesson of 2025 is not that fossil fuels vanished. Gas remains essential. Oil and coal still matter geopolitically. Nuclear retains long-term promise.

Butโ€ฆ.

We must remember total energy consumption remains predominantly fossil fuels. By 2023, the U.S. consumed about 94 quadrillion British thermal units (quads) of primary energy and produced about 103 quads, remaining a net energy producer for the fifth straight year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Petroleum (38%) and natural gas (36%) dominated consumption, followed by coal (9%), nuclear (9%), and renewables (9%), while production was similarly led by natural gas (38%) and petroleum (34%), with coal (11%), renewables (8%), and nuclear (8%) trailing.

Energy use was concentrated in transportation (37%) and industry (35%), with residential and commercial sectors accounting for the remainder, and the electric power sector serving as the central conversion hub supplying nearly all utility-scale electricity. Over the long term, the U.S. energy mix has shifted markedly: petroleumโ€™s share has fallen from its 1970s peak, natural gas has doubled its share since 1950, coal has declined from 37% to 9%, and renewables reached record highs by 2023, driven mainly by rapid growth in wind and solar, even as hydropower fluctuated.

Nuclear energy has remained broadly stable near 9% of consumption, with incremental gains from efficiency improvements and a new reactor offsetting prior retirements. With new permits in a decade nuclear may likely increase.

Overall, the data show a U.S. energy system still dominated by fossil fuels in absolute terms, but steadily evolving toward gas and renewables, with coal in structural decline and electricity playing an ever-larger role in linking production to end use.

But if we get back to the marginal megawattโ€”the one utilities actually choose when expandingโ€”shifted again toward solar and storage. In 2025 on the margin the grid made that decision calmly, incrementally, and with little regard for politics.

Markets spoke first. Policy is still catching up.

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In 2025, solar and battery storage dominated U.S. grid expansion with 90% of new capacity, outpacing gas and coal despite political rhetoric. (read full article...)

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