@misc{36234, author = {Joseph Rand and Nick Manderlink and Will Gorman and Ryan H Wiser and Joachim Seel and Julie Mulvaney Kemp and Seongeun Jeong and Fritz Kahrl}, title = {Queued Up: 2024 Edition, Characteristics of Power Plants Seeking Transmission Interconnection As of the End of 2023}, abstract = {

Electric transmission system operators (ISOs, RTOs, or utilities) require projects seeking to connect to the grid to undergo a series of impact studies before they can be built. This process establishes what new transmission equipment or upgrades may be needed before a project can connect to the system and assigns the costs of that equipment. The lists of projects in this process are known as “interconnection queues”. The amount of new electric capacity in these queues is growing dramatically, with nearly 2,600 gigawatts (GW) of total generation and storage capacity now seeking connection to the grid (over 95% of which is for zero-carbon resources like solar, wind, and battery storage). However, most projects that apply for interconnection are ultimately withdrawn, and those that are built are taking longer on average to complete the required studies and become operational. Data from these queues nonetheless provide a general indicator for mid-term trends in developer interest.

This annually updated briefing and data file compiles and analyzes interconnection queue data from all seven ISOs/RTOs alongside 44 non-ISO utilities, which collectively represent over 95% of the currently installed U.S. electric generating capacity.

}, year = {2024}, month = {04/2024}, note = {

An interactive visualization of the queue data accompanies this briefing here and interactive maps here. A brief overview of this study can be read hereThe most recent edition of this report is always available at: https://emp.lbl.gov/queues

A webinar discussing this research recorecded on April 23, 2024, can be viewed here

}, language = {eng}, }