An extended crisis in the US coal industry and ecological concerns surrounding energy generation are important contributors to the phenomenal growth in solar power generation capacity in the US during the last decade. Net solar electricity generation has increased by 7,135 percent, from about 508,000 MWh in 2006 to 36.8 million MWh in 2016.

The average growth rate for solar power generation capacity was about 73 percent per year between 2010 and 2016, a significantly higher rate than other electricity generation technologies. The rate has slowed, however, during the last three years, increasing by 46 percent from January 2016 to January 2017, according to US Energy Information Administration (EIA).



Last year, California led the nation in new solar capacity generation, while Minnesota was the top state by new solar capacity as a share of pre-2016 capacity.

Even some US-based coal companies are now turning to solar, transforming coal real estate into solar farms and publicly promoting the job growth the strategy promises for communities that have suffered during the decline of US coal production.

Today, the combined net electricity generation capacity of the country’s 2,000 solar power plants is just 2 percent of the national total, and just 1 percent of the United State's total electricity generation. So, what do energy authorities expect from this industry going forward?