State ranking · Final EIA-860 2024

States Ranked by Proposed Power Capacity

Where is the largest proposed generation pipeline?

#1Texas88,939 MW450 proposed generators

Definition

What this ranking measures

Proposed capacity is a development pipeline, not a construction forecast. Projects may change, be delayed, or never enter service.

Top 10

Proposed capacity

Ranked high to low
1Texas88,939 MW2California21,042 MW3Arizona17,521 MW4Oregon8,731 MW5New York8,550 MW6Georgia8,220 MW7Wyoming8,212 MW8New Mexico7,832 MW9Virginia7,714 MW10Indiana7,337 MW

Complete ranking

All qualifying states

50 entries
RankStateProposed capacityContextProfile
1TexasTX88,939 MW450 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
2CaliforniaCA21,042 MW317 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
3ArizonaAZ17,521 MW86 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
4OregonOR8,731 MW32 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
5New YorkNY8,550 MW166 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
6GeorgiaGA8,220 MW34 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
7WyomingWY8,212 MW19 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
8New MexicoNM7,832 MW49 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
9VirginiaVA7,714 MW63 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
10IndianaIN7,337 MW45 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
11IllinoisIL7,190 MW139 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
12PennsylvaniaPA7,074 MW62 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
13NevadaNV6,067 MW34 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
14UtahUT5,616 MW40 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
15OhioOH5,445 MW40 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
16ColoradoCO5,402 MW56 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
17TennesseeTN5,295 MW63 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
18MichiganMI4,866 MW32 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
19WashingtonWA4,621 MW16 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
20FloridaFL4,374 MW60 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
21MissouriMO4,098 MW24 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
22LouisianaLA3,602 MW35 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
23OklahomaOK3,590 MW22 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
24KentuckyKY3,523 MW41 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
25KansasKS3,327 MW18 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
26North DakotaND2,867 MW15 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
27MississippiMS2,720 MW28 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
28WisconsinWI2,710 MW27 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
29South CarolinaSC2,422 MW35 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
30NebraskaNE2,377 MW22 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
31ArkansasAR1,929 MW24 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
32MontanaMT1,821 MW15 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
33North CarolinaNC1,642 MW34 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
34AlabamaAL1,591 MW16 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
35IdahoID1,321 MW22 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
36MinnesotaMN1,260 MW39 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
37MassachusettsMA1,072 MW37 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
38MaineME956 MW19 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
39West VirginiaWV846 MW14 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
40ConnecticutCT799 MW23 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
41Rhode IslandRI731 MW5 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
42MarylandMD656 MW24 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
43IowaIA633 MW8 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
44HawaiiHI420 MW25 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
45DelawareDE186 MW8 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
46South DakotaSD137 MW9 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
47VermontVT72 MW3 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
48New JerseyNJ39 MW6 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
49AlaskaAK32 MW5 proposed generatorsOpen profile →
50Washington, D.C.DC7 MW2 proposed generatorsOpen profile →

Compare the leaders

See their full portfolios

Move beyond one metric and compare fuel mix, plants, and proposed capacity.

Compare top four statesBrowse state profiles