2023 Was Another Big Year for Newly Installed & Proposed Hybrid Power
A newly released briefing from Berkeley Lab tracks and maps both operational and proposed hybrid plants >1 MW in size across the United States while also synthesizing data mined
A newly released briefing from Berkeley Lab tracks and maps both operational and proposed hybrid plants >1 MW in size across the United States while also synthesizing data mined
This data product presents an annual snapshot of trends in hybrid and co-located power plants, defined as projects that combine two or more generators and/or storage assets at a single point of
This map displays information on location, fuel type, electric generation, generating capacity, ownership, and emissions for over 10,000 power plants across the country.
This annually updated briefing tracks and maps existing hybrid or co-located plants across the United States while also synthesizing data from power purchase agreements (PPAs) and generation
This data product presents an annual snapshot of trends in hybrid and co-located power plants. It summarizes public empirical data, especially from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA),
Notes: (1) Not all of this capacity will be built; (2) Hybrid plants involving multiple generator types (e.g., wind+PV+storage, wind+PV) show up in all generator categories, presuming the capacity is known
Based in part on Form EIA-860 data, there were at least 226 co-located hybrid plants (>1 MW) operating across the United States at the end of 2020, totaling more than 30 GW of aggregate capacity (see
To identify the best locations for hybrid plant development, NLR has created high-resolution wind and solar maps using a national database called the WIND Toolkit for wind
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