President Trump has promised to revive the coal industry and double down on fossil fuels, creating “so many energy jobs,” but he has not focused on the increasingly important role of renewable power in America’s energy economy.

Last year, the solar industry employed many more Americans than coal, while wind power topped 100,000 jobs.

Power creation jobs in 2016 1.9 million Natural gas 398,235 Coal 160,119 Solar 373,807 Bioenergy 130,677 Wind 101,738 Oil 515,518 Other* Nuclear 76,771 Hydroelectric 65,554 Geothermal Renewable and low emission tech Fossil fuels (*Includes some fossil fuels) Power creation jobs in 2016 1.9 million Natural gas 398,235 Coal 160,119 Solar 373,807 Bioenergy 130,677 Wind 101,738 Oil 515,518 Other* Nuclear 76,771 Hydroelectric 65,554 Fossil fuels Renewable and low emission technologies *Includes some fossil fuels Power creation jobs in 2016 1.9 million Natural gas 398,235 Oil 515,518 Coal 160,119 Other* Bioenergy 130,677 Nuclear 76,771 Solar 373,807 Hydro 65,554 Wind 101,738 Fossil fuels Renewable and low emission technologies *Includes some fossil fuels Power creation jobs in 2016 1.9 million Natural gas 398,235 Coal 160,119 Solar 373,807 Bioenergy 130,677 Wind 101,738 Oil 515,518 Other* Nuclear 76,771 Hydroelectric 65,554 Geothermal Fossil fuels (*Includes some fossil fuels) Renewable and low emission technologies

Those numbers come from a Department of Energy report published in January by the Obama administration that provides the most complete picture available of American energy employment.

A Department of Energy spokesperson for the current administration declined to discuss the report on the record.

In 2016, 1.9 million Americans were employed in electric power generation, mining and other fuel extraction activities, according to the report – a field we’ll call power creation for short.

More than 373,000 Americans worked part or full time in solar energy, and just over 260,000 of them – or about 70 percent – spent a majority of their time on solar projects.

Most solar energy jobs were in installation, construction and manufacturing, as the relatively new industry continued to add capacity. Solar power still generated a small share of United States energy output last year.

The coal industry, which has shed jobs since 2012, primarily due to competition from cheap natural gas, employed just over 160,000 workers nationwide. About 54,000 coal jobs were in mining.

It's important to note that power creation isn’t the only source of energy employment. The Energy Department report found another 2.3 million jobs in energy transmission, storage and distribution, a number that includes powerline and pipeline workers and more than 900,000 retail jobs, such as gas station workers and fuel dealers. If non-traditional energy workers are included in the mix – those involved in manufacturing and installing energy-efficient products – the total number of energy-related jobs swells to 6.4 million.

Solar has more jobs across the country, but coal is a more important employer in some states.

Employees in industry per 10,000 workers 5 20 50 100 200 Solar Coal Wind Hydroelectric Natural gas Oil and other fossil fuels Employees in industry per 10,000 workers 5 20 50 100 200 Solar Coal Wind Hydroelectric Natural gas Oil and other fossil fuels Employees in industry per 10,000 workers 5 20 50 100 200 Solar Coal Wind Hydroelectric Natural gas Oil and other fossil fuels Employees in industry per 10,000 workers 5 20 50 100 200 Solar Coal Wind Hydroelectric Oil and other fossil fuels Natural gas

Of course, energy jobs aren’t equally distributed throughout the country.

California, a state with robust renewable energy standards and installation incentives, had the highest rate of solar power jobs per capita last year. Roughly 84 of every 10,000 workers in the state held part or full time jobs in the solar industry. Nevada came in close second, followed by Hawaii, Vermont and Massachusetts.

Midwest and Great Plains states had the highest rates of wind energy employment. The region has been leading the way on renewable power generation thanks to its strong wind resources.

Though supporting fewer total jobs, the coal industry still employed an outsize share of workers in two states: Wyoming and West Virginia.