Topline Findings
// Generation project announcements remained elevated through April 2026: E2 tracked eight new utility-scale generation and storage projects totaling 951 MW in added capacity, 4,500 new jobs, and over $1.5 billion in new investment. Year-to-date, 62 generation and storage projects have been announced that will invest nearly $20 billion in estimated investment, create 50,000+ jobs, and add 13.3 GW of capacity—enough to power around 10 million homes. Developers continue moving projects forward ahead of the July 4 tax credit eligibility deadline established under OBBBA.
// Generation project abandonments continued to accelerate: E2 tracked eight abandoned generation projects in April which would have invested $3 billion, created over 9,000 new jobs, and added 1.8 GW of new capacity. Year-to-date, there have been 46 canceled, closed, or indefinitely postponed generation and storage projects through April totaling more than 42,000 lost construction jobs, nearly $16 billion in abandoned investment, and 9.8 GW of lost capacity—enough to power around 8 million homes.
// Manufacturing investment remained stable but subdued: Six new manufacturing projects were announced in May which would invest nearly $1.5 billion and create almost 3,000 jobs, Year-to-Date, only 20 major manufacturing projects totaling approximately $2.6 billion and 5,564 jobs have been announced—a pace far below 2022 and 2024.
// Manufacturing project reversals slowing down: Companies canceled, closed, or downsized just one manufacturing project in May 2026 totaling $942 million in lost investment and more than 900 lost jobs. Year-to-date, just eight clean energy manufacturing projects have been canceled which would have invested $2.3 billion and created over 9,000 new jobs.
// Clean energy manufacturing losses continue to outpace gains: Since 2025, companies have canceled more than twice as much manufacturing investment as they have announced, resulting in more than 46,000 lost jobs compared with fewer than 30,000 announced jobs.
// Texas remained the center of both new generation activity and generation project losses: The state continued to lead the nation in new generation announcements, planned capacity, and investment, while also recording the largest volume of canceled generation projects and abandoned investment.
Introduction
This Clean Economy Works (CEW) analysis is part of E2’s ongoing monthly tracking of large-scale clean energy project announcements, cancellations, closures, and downsizes across the United States. This analysis monitors private-sector investment in clean energy manufacturing, generation, and grid infrastructure projects since federal energy tax credits were passed in August 2022. The tracking excludes manufacturing projects that began, were proposed, sited, or in any way began development prior to the federal energy tax incentives of 2022, as well as those funded entirely by federal sources or lacking specific geographic data. Separately, generation projects are tracked throughout all of 2022 and project tracked prior to 2026 are dated by year-only rather than quarter, month, or day (explained further below). CEW measures key indicators including investment value, job creation or losses, project types (manufacturing, generation, storage), and distribution by sector, state, and party affiliation of congressional district.
To improve the accuracy and comprehensiveness of generation project tracking, E2 implemented a major methodology update starting in 2026. Generation projects are now tracked separately from manufacturing projects using data analyzed by Atlas Public Policy from the U.S. Energy Information Administration Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory (Form EIA-860M) and related annual generator datasets. The updated methodology focuses exclusively on generation and storage projects of at least 10 megawatts (MW) and provides a more systematic accounting of project announcements, cancellations, construction activity, and operational changes nationwide. To maintain consistency and clarity across reporting periods, the updated methodology was applied to all other time periods E2 has been tracking new and cancelled projects—going back to 2022 when E2 first began tracking. Because the dataset structure used by EIA identifies project additions and transitions using only the year, historical generation project announcements, construction starts, cancellations, and abandonments could only be dated to the year in which the status change appeared in EIA reporting. Moving forward, E2 will maintain monthly snapshots of the EIA inventory data, allowing future updates to identify generation project changes by both month and year.
For more information on the methodology changes along with other changes to the tracking—including updated sector and technology categories—see the methodology section near the end of this report.
The updated tracking reveals a clean energy economy increasingly split between:
- manufacturing sectors facing severe policy and market uncertainty; and
- generation sectors that continue to see growth in announcements in the lead up to tax-credit elimination in July–but also growing project attrition.
This report analyzes manufacturing and generation projects across three major timelines:
- projects announced or abandoned from the passage of energy tax credits in August 2022 to the end of 2024 (2022-2024);
- projects announced or abandoned since the shift in energy policy by the Trump administration and congress to oppose and block clean energy projects and incentives (2025-Q1 2026); and
- projects announced or abandoned in the most recent assessment (Q1 2026).
Projects Updates (April Generation and May Manufacturing)
$14.2 Billion
investments abandoned
42,000
jobs cancelled
$19.1 Billion
investments announced
49,000
new jobs announced
Executive Summary
Clean Economy Works Monthly: May 2026 Manufacturing | April 2026 Generation & Storage
Clean energy developers announced eight new utility-scale generation and storage projects as companies race to announce new construction ahead of the July 4 deadline for federal clean energy tax credit eligibility established under last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). Combined, the projects are estimated to invest $1.5 billion, create more than 4,500 new jobs, and add nearly one gigawatt (GW) of electricity and storage capacity—enough to power about 300,000.
Yet as the Trump admin and Congress continue to make it harder to build new solar, wind and battery plants, project abandonments are piling up as eight other generation projects that could have produced enough electricity to power more than 1 million homes were canceled or indefinitely postponed, according to data analyzed by E2 and Atlas Public Policy. Combined, the canceled projects would have invested nearly $4 billion, created almost 10,000 jobs, and added 1.8 GW of new electricity and storage capacity.
Clean energy manufacturing projects, meanwhile, saw a slight rebound in May. At least six major clean energy factories were announced during the month, while just one project was cancelled. The six announced projects are expected to invest at least $1.5 billion and add 2,952 jobs while the lone canceled manufacturing project would have invested $942 million and employed 900 workers.
Since January, companies have now announced more than 80 new generation and manufacturing and generation projects that will invest $22.4 billion, add 13.3 GW of new generation and storage capacity, and create 46,000 construction and operational jobs. While new announcements look to outpace 2025, they are far below new investments and projects announced between 2022-2024 which saw more than 300 new generation and manufacturing projects each year.
Since the start of 2026, 50+ clean energy projects have been abandoned that would have invested at least $18.2 billion, added 9.8 GW of new capacity, and created over 52,000 construction and operational jobs. That’s more capacity lost, jobs lost, and investment lost to canceled projects than in all of 2022 and 2023 combined.
Key findings from E2’s May/April Clean Economy Works update include:
// Developers announced 8 new large-scale generation and storage projects in April 2026 for year-to-date total of 62 projects, 13.3 GW and nearly $20 billion in estimated investment.
// Companies announced six new manufacturing plants and facilities in May 2026, bringing the year-to-date total to 20 new projects that are estimated to invest at least $2.6 billion and more than 5,500 jobs.
// Eight generation and storage projects were canceled, closed, or indefinitely postponed through April 2026, representing 1.8 GW of lost capacity, nearly 9,000 lost construction jobs, and more than $3 billion in abandoned investment.
// One clean energy manufacturing project was canceled in May, which would have invested nearly $1 billion and employed about 900 workers.
// The capacity lost to canceled generation projects through April already equals roughly three-quarters of the total capacity canceled during all of 2025.
// The jobs lost to canceled generation projects through April (42,300 construction jobs; 1,017 operational jobs) now nearly matches the estimated jobs lost to canceled generation projects in all of 2025 (45,300 construction jobs; 1,058 operational jobs).
// Since the beginning of 2025, clean energy manufacturing project reversals have significantly outpaced new investment, with more than $31 billion in canceled investment compared with approximately $13.5 billion in newly announced investment.
Together, the data point to a clean‑energy economy where rising cancellations in generation and manufacturing are eroding the headline growth in new project announcements. A higher cancellation rate inevitably calls into question how many of today’s newly announced projects will translate into completed projects. And as energy demand and prices continue to climb, the growing uncertainty over whether announced capacity will translate into real power on the grid becomes increasingly concerning.

Manufacturing Overview As of May 2026
Tables and charts of data available in full analysis, download here.
May brought a modest uptick in clean energy manufacturing activity compared to the first few months of the year, with companies announcing six new manufacturing projects totaling approximately $1.48 billion in investment and nearly 3,000 jobs. New announcements were concentrated in solar manufacturing, battery production, transformers, and grid equipment, reflecting continued demand for domestic energy infrastructure and supply chain investments despite growing market uncertainty.
At the same time, companies announced one major manufacturing cancellation in May. The cancellation of Ebon Solar’s planned manufacturing facility in New Mexico represented nearly $1 billion in lost investment and 900 jobs, underscoring the continuing challenges facing domestic clean energy manufacturing projects.
While May’s announcement activity was stronger than earlier months in 2026, the broader trend remains one of slowing investment and elevated project reversals. Through the first five months of the year, E2 tracked 20 new manufacturing projects totaling approximately $2.6 billion in announced investment and more than 5,500 jobs. During the same period, companies canceled, closed, or downsized eight manufacturing projects representing nearly $2.3 billion in lost investment and more than 9,000 jobs.
Electric vehicle manufacturing and supply chain facilities remain the most volatile segment of the clean energy manufacturing economy. Since the beginning of 2025, major cancellations and downsizes involving EV assembly plants, battery facilities, and component suppliers have accounted for the majority of lost manufacturing investment nationwide. Slower EV market growth, policy uncertainty, and the rollback of federal incentives have all contributed to increasing instability across the sector.
At the same time, grid-related manufacturing continues to emerge as one of the strongest areas of growth. New investments in transformers, distribution equipment, and other grid technologies reflect growing demand for transmission expansion, grid modernization, and reliability upgrades needed to support rising electricity demand.
The longer-term trend remains concerning. Since the beginning of 2025, E2 has tracked 104 manufacturing announcements totaling approximately $13.5 billion in investment and nearly 30,000 jobs. Over that same period, companies have canceled, closed, or downsized 63 projects totaling more than $31.5 billion in abandoned investment and more than 46,000 lost jobs. For every dollar of new manufacturing investment announced since the policy shift beginning in 2025, more than two dollars have been canceled.
Geographic Trends
Manufacturing activity in May was concentrated primarily in Georgia, South Carolina, Arizona, Michigan, and New Mexico. New projects included solar manufacturing facilities, battery production, transformer manufacturing, and distribution equipment investments. However, the cancellation of Ebon Solar’s New Mexico facility demonstrated that project losses continue to affect states that had previously emerged as beneficiaries of the domestic clean energy manufacturing boom.
Republican-held congressional districts continued to account for most new manufacturing announcements, reflecting the geographic concentration of many large-scale manufacturing projects. At the same time, both Republican- and Democratic-held districts continued to experience significant project reversals, highlighting the nationwide nature of the slowdown.
Market-wide Trends
The manufacturing data continue to show a dramatic shift in investment activity since the beginning of 2025. Between passage of the federal energy tax credits in 2022 and the end of 2024, E2 tracked more than 300 active manufacturing projects totaling nearly $117 billion in announced investment while project cancellations remained relatively limited. Electric vehicle manufacturing, renewable energy equipment, battery supply chains, and grid technologies collectively drove one of the largest surges in domestic manufacturing investment in decades.
Since the policy shift opposing clean energy in 2025, however, that trend has reversed. New manufacturing investment has slowed sharply while project cancellations and downsizes have accelerated. Canceled manufacturing investment since the beginning of 2025 through May 2026 exceeded $31 billion—more than twice the value of newly announced manufacturing investment during the same period.
While some sectors continue to attract investment, particularly grid infrastructure and selected renewable energy manufacturing segments, the overall data suggest a manufacturing market increasingly constrained by policy uncertainty, changing incentive structures, and weakening investor confidence. The result is a sector that remains active but is operating at a substantially lower level than during the first three years following passage of the 2022 clean energy tax credits.

Generation Overview As of April 2026*
*Because EIA generator inventory data is released as a periodic monthly snapshot, E2’s generation and storage project tracking lags manufacturing tracking by one month. For more, read the About this Analysis section.
Tables and charts of data available in full analysis, download here.
Developers continued to push utility-scale generation and storage projects forward in April as the industry approached the July 4 federal tax credit eligibility deadline established under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). During April alone, developers announced eight new utility-scale generation and storage projects totaling nearly 1 GW of new capacity, more than 4,400 construction jobs, and approximately $1.5 billion in estimated investment.
At the same time, eight generation and storage projects were canceled, closed, or indefinitely postponed in April, representing approximately 1.8 GW of lost capacity, nearly 9,000 lost construction jobs, and roughly $3 billion in abandoned investment. The near one-to-one balance between new announcements and project losses illustrates the increasingly volatile market conditions facing clean energy developers as policy uncertainty, financing challenges, and permitting barriers continue to grow.
In the runup to the tax credit deadline, generation announcements have been substantially stronger than manufacturing announcements in 2026. Through the first five months of the year, E2 tracked 62 announced utility-scale generation and storage projects totaling more than 13.3 GW of planned capacity, nearly 50,000 construction jobs, and approximately $19.9 billion in estimated investment.
Solar, battery storage, and hybrid solar-plus-storage projects accounted for most new generation activity nationwide. Developers continue to prioritize these technologies because they remain among the fastest and most cost-effective sources of new electricity generation available to utilities and large energy consumers facing rapidly growing power demand.
Project cancellations have also continued to mount. Through April 2026, E2 tracked 46 canceled, closed, or indefinitely postponed generation and storage projects totaling nearly 9.8 GW of lost capacity, more than 42,000 lost construction jobs, and nearly $16 billion in abandoned investment. That’s more capacity lost, jobs lost, and investment lost to canceled projects in all of 2022 and 2023 combined. Compared to 2025 uptick in cancellations, the pace has increased further in 2026. Through just four months, the capacity lost to canceled generation has already reached roughly three-quarters of the total capacity canceled during all of 2025.
Solar, storage, and hybrid projects accounted for the majority of these losses, reflecting the same sectors driving most new development activity.
The broader trend highlights the competing forces shaping today’s electricity market. Since the beginning of 2025, E2 has tracked 90 announced generation projects totaling nearly 18.7 GW and more than $28 billion in investment. During that same period, however, developers have canceled 131 projects totaling more than 23 GW of lost capacity and approximately $43 billion in abandoned investment. While developers continue advancing new projects, cancellations are occurring at an increasingly rapid pace.
Geographic Trends
Texas remained the nation’s leading market for new generation announcements through April 2026, accounting for more projects, planned capacity, and investment than any other state. California also continued to attract some of the country’s largest utility-scale solar and hybrid generation developments.
However, Texas also led the nation in canceled generation projects and abandoned investment, illustrating the increasingly mixed nature of clean energy development. Significant project cancellations were also recorded in New York, Colorado, Kansas, and New Mexico, particularly among battery storage and solar projects.
Battery storage remains one of the fastest-growing segments of the clean energy economy, but it is also experiencing some of the highest levels of project attrition. In several regions, new storage announcements have been partially offset by canceled projects elsewhere, reducing net capacity gains from one of the technologies expected to play a critical role in supporting future grid reliability.
Market-wide Trends
The generation data present a more complicated picture than manufacturing. On one hand, the scale of announced generation projects remains substantial. Since E2 began tracking, solar, wind, and battery storage have accounted for the overwhelming majority of new clean energy generation capacity operating, under construction, or planned across the United States. Solar and battery storage, in particular, continue to dominate new project activity.
On the other hand, project cancellations have risen sharply since the beginning of 2025. The amount of canceled or indefinitely postponed capacity has increased dramatically across nearly every major technology category, with solar and battery storage accounting for much of the recent increase in abandoned projects.
The first four months of 2026 reinforced both trends simultaneously. Developers continue moving projects forward at an elevated pace ahead of the July tax credit deadline compared to 2025, yet cancellations continue to rise alongside new announcements. This dynamic reflects a market attempting to accelerate announcements before federal incentives expire while also navigating increasing financing pressures, policy uncertainty, permitting challenges, and interconnection constraints blocking their final development.
Conclusion
April and May 2026 continued two increasingly distinct trends within the U.S. clean energy economy. Utility-scale generation developers continued advancing new solar, battery storage, and hybrid announcements ahead of the July 4 federal tax credit eligibility deadline, while clean energy manufacturers faced a far more challenging investment environment marked by ongoing project cancellations, downsizing, and slower investment activity.
During May, generation announcements remained strong, but project cancellations also continued to rise. New generation and storage projects announced during the month were largely offset by canceled or indefinitely postponed projects elsewhere, illustrating the growing uncertainty facing developers even as demand for new electricity continues to accelerate. Manufacturing activity showed some signs of life through several new project announcements, particularly in grid equipment, transformers, batteries, and renewable energy manufacturing, but these gains were partially offset by additional project losses, including the cancellation of a major solar manufacturing facility in New Mexico.
Taken together, the data suggest that businesses continue to see significant demand for clean energy technologies and new electricity generation, particularly as electricity demand grows from data centers, manufacturing, electrification, and broader economic growth. However, policy uncertainty, the rollback of federal incentives, permitting challenges, and financing pressures are making it increasingly difficult for many projects to move forward.
The result is a clean energy economy that continues to produce new investment and development opportunities, but one that is becoming increasingly unstable. While developers race to qualify projects before federal incentives expire, rising cancellations and slowing manufacturing investment threaten to reduce future energy supply, limit economic development opportunities, and increase costs for businesses and consumers at a time when the need for new energy and new infrastructure has rarely been greater.
About this Analysis
The Clean Economy Works (CEW) analysis tracks large-scale clean energy manufacturing and generation project announcements, cancellations, closures, and downsizes across the United States. Tracking of new announcements began in 2022 after the passage of federal energy tax credits. In 2025, CEW expanded its methodology to comprehensively track cancellations, closures, and downsizes dating back to August 2022, reflecting rising business uncertainty amid increasing policy attacks targeting clean energy industries including the rollback and restriction of key energy tax credits in mid-2025. Temporary delays and ownership transfers that do not reduce production capacity are excluded. In 2026, E2 expanded its methodology again to better track generation projects
This Clean Economy Works (CEW) analysis is part of E2’s ongoing monthly tracking of large-scale clean energy project announcements, cancellations, closures, and downsizes across the United States. This analysis monitors private-sector investment in clean energy manufacturing, generation, and storage projects since federal energy tax credits were passed in August 2022. The tracking excludes manufacturing projects that began, were proposed, sited, or in any way began development prior to the federal energy tax incentives of 2022, as well as those funded entirely by federal sources or lacking specific geographic data. Separately, generation projects are tracked throughout all of 2022 and project tracked prior to 2026 are dated by year-only rather than quarter, month, or day (explained further below). CEW measures key indicators including investment value, job creation or losses, project types (manufacturing, generation, storage), and distribution by sector, state, and party affiliation of congressional district.
Manufacturing projects are tracked through publicly available company announcements, public filings, media reporting, statements by local leaders and other public sources. This analysis is limited to only private-sector investment in clean energy manufacturing and generation projects since federal energy tax credits were passed in August 2022. The tracking excludes projects that were proposed, sited, or in any way began development prior to the passage of federal energy tax credits as well as those funded entirely by federal sources or lacking specific geographic data. Project delays or idling of facilities are not included unless there is an announced decrease in production or investment or unless the project will need to be restarted to proceed in the future.
Job estimates and capital investment figures associated with tracked projects come directly from company announcements or other publicly available data. About one-third of all projects include either no job or investment estimates in their announcements. Project details—including locations, job estimates, and investments estimates—are updated when new publicly available information is provided by companies or media reports.
Generation projects are tracked using data analyzed by Atlas Public Policy from the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory (Form EIA-860M), alongside annual EIA generator data where applicable, as the primary source for monitoring new generation project announcements, construction activity, operational changes, cancellations, postponements, and retirements. Under the EIA dataset structure, historical status transitions and project additions are only identifiable by year rather than by exact month or day as is the case with manufacturing projects. As a result 1) historical generation project announcements, construction starts, cancellations, and abandonments can only be dated to the year in which the status change appeared in EIA reporting, and 2) moving forward, E2 will maintain monthly snapshots of the EIA inventory data, allowing future updates to identify generation project changes by month, quarter, and year.
Investment, construction jobs, and operational jobs listed in the tracking are estimates based on size and technology. For solar, biomass, wind, hydroelectric, and geothermal generators, jobs are estimated using multipliers derived from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory Jobs and Economic Development Impacts (JEDI) models. For battery projects, construction jobs are estimated using a multiplier from a separate National Renewable Energy Laboratory study (operations jobs are not estimated due to lack of adequate data). Construction jobs represent the total full-time equivalent workers (FTEs) required over the entire construction period, which varies by generator type, and operations jobs represent FTEs per year that the project is operating.Capital expenditure is estimated by multiplying the nameplate capacity of each project by CAPEX multipliers from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory 2024 Annual Technology Baseline, considering the technology type and operating year. Values are converted to 2024 dollars using Consumer Price Index Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. See the full methodology here.
Because EIA generator inventory data is released as periodic monthly snapshots and may include reporting delays from developers, generation project updates lag manufacturing tracking by one month.
Together, the data provide a clear picture of a U.S. clean energy economy that entered 2025 with momentum—but exited the year facing mounting instability, record reversals, and eroding investor confidence—A concerning trend that has continued into 2026
About this Analysis
Announcements
Manufacturing projects that began development, were proposed, or applied for local and state approval before the passage of the 2022 clean energy tax credits are not included. Generation projects aretracked since the beginning of 2022 due to limitations of historical EIA data. This analysis also does not include investments in which the federal government has provided financial resources for the complete project, lease sales, projects in which an announcement was made but lacked specific geographic information, etc. Details on manufacturing projects came from news reports on new and related projects; press releases from companies announcing new developments; and government announcements. Details on generation projects come from calculated estimates based on the size, location, and technology of the project announced.
Cancellations, Closures, Downsizes
This tracking includes all manufacturing projects, plants, operations, or expansions that were canceled or closed since passage of the clean energy tax credits in August 2022. For generation, all project cancelations that occurred in 2022 are included due to limitations in historical EIA data. Tracking does not include announced layoffs that are not associated with a project downsizing unless there is a stated decrease in production output. This list also does not include the transfer of project ownership, if production continues under the new ownership, power purchasing agreements, or other similar type of announcements. Project delays or idling of facilities are not included unless there is an announced decrease in production or investment or unless the project will need to be restarted to proceed in the future. Details on manufacturing projects came from news reports on new and related projects; press releases from companies announcing new developments; and government announcements. Details on generation projects come from estimates based on the size, location, and technology of the project announced.
About this Analysis
Announcements
Projects that began development, were proposed, or applied for local and state approval before the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) are not included. This analysis also does not include investments in which the federal government has provided financial resources for the complete project, lease sales, projects in which an announcement was made but lacked specific geographic information, etc. Details on projects came from news reports on new and related projects; press releases from companies announcing new developments; and government announcements.
Cancellations, Closures, Downsizes
This tracking includes all projects, plants, operations, or expansions that were cancelled or closed since passage of the IRA in August 2022. This does not include announced layoffs that are not associated with a project downsizing unless there is a stated decease in production output. This list also does not include the transfer of project ownership, if production will continue under the new ownership, power purchasing agreements, or other similar type of announcements. Project delays or idling of facilities are not included unless there in an announced decrease in production or investment or unless the project will need to be restarted to proceed in the future.
Tables detailing the large-scale clean energy manufacturing project announcements and abandonments made since August 16, 2022 and clean energy generation project announcements and abandonments made since 2022 are below. **Tables are auto-updating and reflect the latest updates. To see the Q1 2026 specific tables, download the report above.**
Appendix 1A | Latest manufacturing project announcements (May 2026)
Appendix 1B | Latest manufacturing project abandonments (May 2026)
Appendix 2A | Manufacturing projects announced by year Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 2B | Manufacturing projects abandoned by year Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 3A | Manufacturing projects announced by sector; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 3B | Manufacturing projects abandoned by sector; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 4A | Manufacturing projects announced by type; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 4B | Manufacturing projects abandoned by type; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 5A | Manufacturing projects announced by congressional district; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 5B | Manufacturing projects abandoned by congressional district; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 6A | Manufacturing projects announced by state; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 6B | Manufacturing projects abandoned by state; Q3 2022-May 2026
Appendix 7A | Latest generation project announcements (April 2026)
Appendix 7B | Latest generation project abandonments (April 2026)
Appendix 8A | Generation projects by year 2022-April 2026
Appendix 8B | Generation projects abandoned by year 2022-April 2026
Appendix 9A | Generation projects announced by sector; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 9B | Generation projects abandoned by sector; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 10A | Generation projects announced by type; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 10b | Generation projects abandoned by type; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 11A | Generation projects announced by congressional district; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 11B | Generation projects abandoned by congressional district; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 12A | Generation projects announced by state; 2022-April 2026
Appendix 12B | Generation projects abandoned by state; 2022-April 2026
Tables
APPENDIX 1A
latest manufacturing projects announced
| Date | Developer | State | Status | Sector | Tech | Investment | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 07/05/2026 | SEG Solar | MI | Construction | Renewable | Solar | 200,000,000.00 | 800 |
| 18/05/2026 | EnergyX | NM | Planned | Storage | Batteries | 400,000,000.00 | 200 |
| 19/05/2026 | Tesla | GA | Planned | Renewable | Solar | 250,000,000.00 | |
| 20/05/2026 | Virginia Transformer | GA | Planned | Grid | Transformers | 600,000,000.00 | 1,100 |
| 22/05/2026 | SpaceX | AZ | Planned | Renewable | Solar | 500 | |
| 28/05/2026 | Jabil | SC | Planned | Grid | Distribution Equipment | 30,000,000.00 | 352 |
APPENDIX 1B
latest manufacturing project abandonments
| Date | Developer | State | Status | Sector | Tech | Investment | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/1/26 | Ebon Solar | NM | Cancellation | Renewable | Solar | 942,000,000.00 | 900 |
APPENDIX 2A
projects manufacturing announced by year Q3 2022-May 2026
| Year | Projects | Investments | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 (Q3-Q4) | 57 | 36,004,200,000 | 24,838 |
| 2023 | 166 | 65,430,500,000 | 59,020 |
| 2024 | 79 | 17,131,659,000 | 22,070 |
| 2025 | 84 | 10,868,755,000 | 24,288 |
| 2026 (Jan-May) | 20 | 2,604,333,000 | 5,564 |
| Total | 406 | 132,039,447,000 | 135,780 |
APPENDIX 2B
manufacturing projects abandoned by year Q3 2022-May 2026
| Year | Projects | Investment Lost | Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 (Q3-Q4) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2023 | 11 | 1,451,400,000 | 4,222 |
| 2024 | 18 | 2,937,200,000 | 6,836 |
| 2025 | 56 | 30,634,800,000 | 37,901 |
| 2026 (Jan-May) | 8 | 2,289,900,000 | 9,002 |
| Total | 93 | 37,313,300,000 | 57,961 |
APPENDIX 3A
manufacturing projects announced by sector; Q3 2022-May 2026
| Sector | Projects | Investments | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Energy Efficiency | 1 | 6,000,000 | 200 |
| EV | 167 | 85,574,300,000 | 61,904 |
| Grid | 61 | 6,370,667,000 | 13,691 |
| Renewable | 120 | 21,175,880,000 | 39,901 |
| Storage | 57 | 18,912,600,000 | 20,084 |
APPENDIX 3B
manufacturing projects abandoned by sector; Q3 2022-May 2026
| Sector | Projects | Investment Lost | Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| EV | 59 | 25,596,700,000 | 42,825 |
| Grid | 1 | 150,000,000 | 600 |
| Renewable | 15 | 2,942,900,000 | 4,607 |
| Storage | 18 | 8,623,700,000 | 9,929 |
APPENDIX 4A
manufacturing projects announced by technology; Q3 2022-May 2026
| Type | Projects | Investments | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Batteries | 91 | 46,089,800,000 | 33,864 |
| Distribution Equipment | 18 | 1,643,425,000 | 4,065 |
| Heat Pump | 1 | 6,000,000 | 200 |
| Hydrogen | 13 | 939,200,000 | 748 |
| Management Equipment | 10 | 1,240,000,000 | 2,468 |
| EV Parts & Assembly | 131 | 57,873,100,000 | 47,464 |
| Solar | 82 | 18,125,180,000 | 35,829 |
| Transformers | 32 | 3,412,242,000 | 7,888 |
| Wind | 28 | 2,710,500,000 | 3,254 |
APPENDIX 4B
manufacturing projects abandoned by technology; Q3 2022-May 2026
| Type | Projects | Investment Lost | Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Batteries | 39 | 23,110,900,000 | 25,261 |
| Hydrogen | 3 | 437,900,000 | 1,050 |
| Parts & Assembly | 36 | 10,899,500,000 | 26,475 |
| Solar | 11 | 2,315,000,000 | 4,157 |
| Transformers | 1 | 0 | 600 |
| Wind | 3 | 0 | 418 |
APPENDIX 5A
manufacturing projects announced by congressional district; Q3 2022-Mat 2026
| Party | Projects | Investments | Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | 259 | 110,168,867,000 | 101,019 |
| Democratic | 126 | 21,133,380,000 | 32,382 |
| Unknown | 21 | 737,200,000 | 2,379 |
APPENDIX 5B
manufacturing projects abandoned by congressional district; Q3 2022-May 2026
| Party | Projects | Investment Lost | Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | 54 | 24,753,100,000 | 34,468 |
| Democratic | 32 | 11,947,200,000 | 21,993 |
| Unknown | 7 | 613,000,000 | 1,500 |
APPENDIX 6A
manufacturing projects announced by state; Q3 2022-May 2026
| State | Projects | MW | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 11 | 1,498 | 5,272 | 242 | 2,254,454,708 |
| Arizona | 31 | 12,279 | 55,629 | 1,149 | 20,201,412,211 |
| Arkansas | 8 | 1,534 | 4,787 | 286 | 2,306,237,654 |
| California | 80 | 14,786 | 72,442 | 1,121 | 24,901,049,104 |
| Colorado | 10 | 1,871 | 6,010 | 269 | 2,783,198,044 |
| Connecticut | 4 | 630 | 3,098 | 47 | 1,053,811,995 |
| Florida | 15 | 906 | 3,459 | 130 | 1,496,077,493 |
| Georgia | 21 | 4,657 | 16,396 | 757 | 7,099,410,541 |
| Hawaii | 5 | 296 | 1,341 | 30 | 458,930,421 |
| Idaho | 7 | 1,238 | 4,859 | 97 | 1,997,367,161 |
| Illinois | 18 | 3,668 | 8,192 | 440 | 5,784,900,710 |
| Indiana | 23 | 3,983 | 11,365 | 613 | 6,333,983,030 |
| Iowa | 3 | 338 | 443 | 28 | 534,991,326 |
| Kansas | 2 | 222 | 691 | 42 | 338,561,033 |
| Kentucky | 17 | 2,401 | 7,862 | 426 | 3,586,053,593 |
| Louisiana | 9 | 1,424 | 4,592 | 259 | 2,199,811,696 |
| Maine | 3 | 493 | 2,060 | 60 | 741,888,653 |
| Maryland | 4 | 316 | 985 | 60 | 508,143,702 |
| Massachusetts | 2 | 418 | 2,550 | 0 | 704,858,488 |
| Michigan | 20 | 1,955 | 7,402 | 286 | 3,140,586,160 |
| Minnesota | 4 | 85 | 295 | 15 | 135,703,337 |
| Mississippi | 16 | 2,047 | 6,533 | 376 | 3,063,008,178 |
| Missouri | 11 | 2,170 | 7,349 | 284 | 3,455,643,078 |
| Montana | 3 | 811 | 1,952 | 45 | 1,402,076,243 |
| Nebraska | 1 | 100 | 312 | 19 | 158,546,483 |
| Nevada | 9 | 5,029 | 24,080 | 411 | 7,955,084,935 |
| New Jersey | 1 | 20 | 122 | 0 | 36,381,002 |
| New Mexico | 18 | 6,335 | 13,579 | 343 | 10,601,130,735 |
| New York | 24 | 3,266 | 7,442 | 465 | 9,244,270,327 |
| North Carolina | 18 | 1,372 | 5,227 | 201 | 2,117,219,227 |
| North Dakota | 8 | 1,562 | 2,653 | 75 | 2,512,544,303 |
| Ohio | 18 | 2,456 | 6,529 | 369 | 3,768,349,217 |
| Oklahoma | 14 | 2,508 | 5,748 | 348 | 3,964,367,134 |
| Oregon | 8 | 7,135 | 30,634 | 698 | 11,180,976,854 |
| Pennsylvania | 22 | 2,596 | 7,826 | 468 | 3,900,416,168 |
| South Carolina | 10 | 970 | 3,303 | 167 | 1,475,334,892 |
| South Dakota | 2 | 299 | 361 | 23 | 524,145,731 |
| Tennessee | 9 | 773 | 2,412 | 147 | 1,164,944,911 |
| Texas | 236 | 52,302 | 213,150 | 5,379 | 84,234,656,099 |
| Utah | 11 | 2,913 | 13,130 | 291 | 4,794,260,283 |
| Vermont | 2 | 70 | 218 | 14 | 102,108,945 |
| Virginia | 34 | 3,667 | 11,809 | 642 | 5,491,171,592 |
| Washington | 10 | 4,305 | 19,103 | 378 | 6,665,624,279 |
| West Virginia | 5 | 325 | 1,460 | 34 | 539,331,696 |
| Wisconsin | 14 | 3,518 | 12,556 | 535 | 5,295,647,919 |
| Wyoming | 4 | 2,926 | 11,262 | 273 | 4,536,096,318 |
APPENDIX 6B
manufacturing projects abandoned by state; Q3 2022-May 2026
| State | Projects | Investment Lost | Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 1 | 0 | 45 |
| Arizona | 4 | 1,200,000,000 | 3,855 |
| Arkansas | 1 | 0 | 545 |
| California | 4 | 278,500,000 | 708 |
| Colorado | 5 | 840,000,000 | 1,912 |
| Georgia | 5 | 3,362,000,000 | 2,285 |
| Illinois | 3 | 3,270,000,000 | 2,655 |
| Indiana | 3 | 2,680,000,000 | 3,140 |
| Kansas | 1 | 390,000,000 | 900 |
| Kentucky | 6 | 1,273,400,000 | 3,442 |
| Massachusetts | 1 | 200,000,000 | 100 |
| Michigan | 18 | 8,771,300,000 | 10,866 |
| Minnesota | 1 | 27,900,000 | 100 |
| Mississippi | 2 | 836,000,000 | 2,800 |
| Missouri | 1 | 574,000,000 | 150 |
| New Mexico | 1 | 942,000,000 | 900 |
| New York | 5 | 1,400,000,000 | 380 |
| North Carolina | 5 | 1,452,700,000 | 7,620 |
| Ohio | 6 | 3,000,000,000 | 4,886 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 940,000,000 | 2,820 |
| Oregon | 1 | 0 | 418 |
| South Carolina | 4 | 1,746,000,000 | 1,760 |
| Tennessee | 4 | 3,552,500,000 | 4,310 |
| Texas | 2 | 103,000,000 | 150 |
| Virginia | 2 | 309,000,000 | 350 |
| Washington | 2 | 0 | 264 |
| West Virginia | 1 | 0 | 600 |
APPENDIX 7A
latest generation projects announced
| Year | Power Plant | State | Sedtor | Technology | MW | Investment | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 April | Corazon Energy Storage | NM | Storage | Batteries | 150 | 0 | 915 | |
| 2026 April | EDPR Scarlet III | CA | Storage | Batteries | 70 | 0 | 427 | |
| 2026 April | Four Mile Mesa Solar, LLC | NM | Storage | Batteries | 100 | 0 | 610 | |
| 2026 April | Foxtail Flats Solar, LLC | NM | Storage | Batteries | 80 | 0 | 488 | |
| 2026 April | Grant Solar, LLC | SD | Renewable | Solar | 99 | 0 | 309 | 19 |
| 2026 April | Oso Negro | NM | Storage | Batteries | 100 | 0 | 610 | |
| 2026 April | Panhandle Solar | OK | Renewable | Solar | 102 | 0 | 318 | 19 |
| 2026 April | Rumble Solar | OK | Renewable | Solar | 250 | 0 | 780 | 47 |
APPENDIX 7B
latest generation project abandonments
| Year | Power Plant | State | Status | Sector | Tech | MW Lost | Investment Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 April | Box Canyon (AZ) | AZ | Canceled | Storage | Batteries | 300 | $529,130,970 | 1,830 | |
| 2026 April | Echelon Solar | OH | Canceled | Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | Solar + Batteries | 160 | $262,868,154 | 738 | 15 |
| 2026 April | Issa Solar | VA | Canceled | Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | Solar + Batteries | 300 | $492,877,789 | 1,383 | 28 |
| 2026 April | Luicain Solar | LA | Canceled | Renewable | Solar + Batteries | 65 | $98,935,332 | 203 | 13 |
| 2026 April | May Renewables | SC | Canceled | Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | Solar + Batteries | 200 | $328,585,193 | 922 | 19 |
| 2026 April | May Solar | VA | Canceled | Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | Solar + Batteries | 300 | $492,877,789 | 1,383 | 28 |
| 2026 April | Sinclair BESS | WA | Canceled | Storage | Batteries | 200 | $352,753,980 | 1,220 |
APPENDIX 8A
generation projects announced by year; 2022-April 2026
| Year | Projects | MW | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 250 | 40,895 | 143,034 | 4,581 | 0 |
| 2023 | 167 | 28,818 | 109,042 | 3,196 | 0 |
| 2024 | 298 | 76,079 | 303,817 | 8,503 | 0 |
| 2025 | 28 | 5,369 | 22,697 | 537 | 0 |
| 2026 (Jan-May) | 62 | 13,311 | 49,890 | 1,525 | 0 |
| Total | 805 | 164,472 | 628,480 | 18,342 | 0 |
APPENDIX 2B
generation projects abandoned by year; 2022-April 2026
| Year | Projects | MW Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost | Investment Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 2,398 | 8,244 | 230 | 4,367,506,909 | |
| 2023 | 5,281 | 19,112 | 704 | 9,719,143,597 | |
| 2024 | 11,925 | 32,025 | 1,733 | 31,497,984,188 | |
| 2025 | 13,359 | 45,302 | 1,058 | 27,063,115,328 | |
| 2026 (Jan-May) | 9,792 | 42,349 | 1,017 | 15,936,995,020 | |
| Total | 42,755 | 147,032 | 4,742 | 88,584,745,042 |
APPENDIX 9A
generation projects announced by sector; 2022-April 2026
| Sector | Projects | MW | Construction | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | 142 | 59,210 | 263,411 | 6,058 | 94,591,371,856 |
| Renewable | 472 | 78,434 | 201,440 | 12,284 | 124,094,126,925 |
| Storage | 191 | 26,829 | 163,629 | 0 | 48,059,268,828 |
APPENDIX 9B
manufacturing projects abandoned by sector; 2022-April 2026
| Sector | Projects | MW Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost | Investment Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid (Gen/BESS) | 35 | 12,956 | 56,623 | 1,265 | 22,590,399,316 |
| Renewable | 156 | 23,237 | 50,379 | 3,477 | 53,755,318,833 |
| Storage | 58 | 6,562 | 40,030 | 0 | 12,239,026,893 |
APPENDIX 10A
generation projects announced by technology; 2022-April 2026
| Technology | Projects | MW | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Batteries | 191 | 26,829 | 163,629 | 0 | 48,059,268,828 |
| Hydroelectric | 2 | 40 | 44 | 4 | 68,904,326 |
| Solar | 419 | 63,296 | 197,456 | 11,895 | 94,919,214,648 |
| Solar + Batteries | 141 | 56,610 | 252,295 | 5,832 | 90,627,001,968 |
| Wind + Batteries | 52 | 17,698 | 15,056 | 611 | 33,070,377,839 |
APPENDIX 10B
generation projects abandoned by technology; 2022-April 2026
| Technology | Projects | MW Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost | Investment Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Batteries | 58 | 6,562 | 40,030 | 0 | 12,239,026,893 |
| Solar | 127 | 15,457 | 48,213 | 2,910 | 25,045,070,550 |
| Solar + Batteries | 35 | 12,471 | 55,806 | 1,271 | 21,749,359,021 |
| Wind | 28 | 7,716 | 1,963 | 554 | 28,611,312,951 |
| Wind + Batteries | 1 | 550 | 1,020 | 7 | 939,975,627 |
APPENDIX 11A
generation projects announced by congressional district; 2022-April 2026
| Party | Projects | MW | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | 612 | 124,416 | 465,923 | 14,786 | 201,606,743,826 |
| Democratic | 185 | 35,171 | 139,939 | 3,107 | 57,370,238,800 |
| Unknown | 8 | 4,885 | 22,618 | 449 | 7,767,784,983 |
APPENDIX 11B
generation projects abandoned by congressional district; 2022-April 2026
| Party | Projects | MW Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost | Investment Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | 190 | 30,772 | 112,324 | 3,184 | 52,709,222,577 |
| Democratic | 54 | 8,274 | 32,172 | 1,050 | 14,096,839,653 |
| Unknown | 5 | 3,709 | 2,536 | 508 | 21,778,682,812 |
APPENDIX 12A
generation projects announced by state; 2022-April 2026
| State | Projects | MW | Construction Jobs | Operational Jobs | Investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 11 | 1,498 | 5,272 | 242 | 2,254,454,708 |
| Arizona | 31 | 12,279 | 55,629 | 1,149 | 20,201,412,211 |
| Arkansas | 8 | 1,534 | 4,787 | 286 | 2,306,237,654 |
| California | 80 | 14,786 | 72,442 | 1,121 | 24,901,049,104 |
| Colorado | 10 | 1,871 | 6,010 | 269 | 2,783,198,044 |
| Connecticut | 4 | 630 | 3,098 | 47 | 1,053,811,995 |
| Florida | 15 | 906 | 3,459 | 130 | 1,496,077,493 |
| Georgia | 21 | 4,657 | 16,396 | 757 | 7,099,410,541 |
| Hawaii | 5 | 296 | 1,341 | 30 | 458,930,421 |
| Idaho | 7 | 1,238 | 4,859 | 97 | 1,997,367,161 |
| Illinois | 18 | 3,668 | 8,192 | 440 | 5,784,900,710 |
| Indiana | 23 | 3,983 | 11,365 | 613 | 6,333,983,030 |
| Iowa | 3 | 338 | 443 | 28 | 534,991,326 |
| Kansas | 2 | 222 | 691 | 42 | 338,561,033 |
| Kentucky | 17 | 2,401 | 7,862 | 426 | 3,586,053,593 |
| Louisiana | 9 | 1,424 | 4,592 | 259 | 2,199,811,696 |
| Maine | 3 | 493 | 2,060 | 60 | 741,888,653 |
| Maryland | 4 | 316 | 985 | 60 | 508,143,702 |
| Massachusetts | 2 | 418 | 2,550 | 0 | 704,858,488 |
| Michigan | 20 | 1,955 | 7,402 | 286 | 3,140,586,160 |
| Minnesota | 4 | 85 | 295 | 15 | 135,703,337 |
| Mississippi | 16 | 2,047 | 6,533 | 376 | 3,063,008,178 |
| Missouri | 11 | 2,170 | 7,349 | 284 | 3,455,643,078 |
| Montana | 3 | 811 | 1,952 | 45 | 1,402,076,243 |
| Nebraska | 1 | 100 | 312 | 19 | 158,546,483 |
| Nevada | 9 | 5,029 | 24,080 | 411 | 7,955,084,935 |
| New Jersey | 1 | 20 | 122 | 0 | 36,381,002 |
| New Mexico | 18 | 6,335 | 13,579 | 343 | 10,601,130,735 |
| New York | 24 | 3,266 | 7,442 | 465 | 9,244,270,327 |
| North Carolina | 18 | 1,372 | 5,227 | 201 | 2,117,219,227 |
| North Dakota | 8 | 1,562 | 2,653 | 75 | 2,512,544,303 |
| Ohio | 18 | 2,456 | 6,529 | 369 | 3,768,349,217 |
| Oklahoma | 14 | 2,508 | 5,748 | 348 | 3,964,367,134 |
| Oregon | 8 | 7,135 | 30,634 | 698 | 11,180,976,854 |
| Pennsylvania | 22 | 2,596 | 7,826 | 468 | 3,900,416,168 |
| South Carolina | 10 | 970 | 3,303 | 167 | 1,475,334,892 |
| South Dakota | 2 | 299 | 361 | 23 | 524,145,731 |
| Tennessee | 9 | 773 | 2,412 | 147 | 1,164,944,911 |
| Texas | 236 | 52,302 | 213,150 | 5,379 | 84,234,656,099 |
| Utah | 11 | 2,913 | 13,130 | 291 | 4,794,260,283 |
| Vermont | 2 | 70 | 218 | 14 | 102,108,945 |
| Virginia | 34 | 3,667 | 11,809 | 642 | 5,491,171,592 |
| Washington | 10 | 4,305 | 19,103 | 378 | 6,665,624,279 |
| West Virginia | 5 | 325 | 1,460 | 34 | 539,331,696 |
| Wisconsin | 14 | 3,518 | 12,556 | 535 | 5,295,647,919 |
| Wyoming | 4 | 2,926 | 11,262 | 273 | 4,536,096,318 |
APPENDIX 12B
generation projects abandoned by state; 2022-April 2026
| State | Projects | MW Lost | Construction Jobs Lost | Operational Jobs Lost | Investment Lost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2 | 165 | 516 | 31 | 269,430,427 |
| Arizona | 1 | 300 | 1,830 | 0 | 529,130,970 |
| California | 14 | 1,367 | 4,856 | 186 | 2,380,551,216 |
| Colorado | 4 | 1,899 | 7,680 | 174 | 3,185,735,893 |
| Florida | 2 | 36 | 172 | 3 | 68,598,018 |
| Georgia | 5 | 1,043 | 3,254 | 194 | 1,671,053,235 |
| Hawaii | 4 | 220 | 1,015 | 22 | 411,107,077 |
| Idaho | 1 | 400 | 1,844 | 37 | 680,902,984 |
| Illinois | 6 | 1,495 | 3,130 | 120 | 2,461,220,789 |
| Indiana | 5 | 735 | 2,597 | 119 | 1,249,575,925 |
| Iowa | 1 | 212 | 56 | 4 | 353,572,600 |
| Kansas | 1 | 600 | 2,766 | 56 | 985,755,578 |
| Kentucky | 1 | 50 | 156 | 10 | 76,104,101 |
| Louisiana | 1 | 65 | 203 | 13 | 98,935,332 |
| Maine | 2 | 105 | 328 | 21 | 165,997,763 |
| Maryland | 1 | 46 | 144 | 9 | 70,015,773 |
| Michigan | 1 | 20 | 62 | 4 | 32,976,953 |
| Minnesota | 1 | 80 | 250 | 15 | 126,075,515 |
| Mississippi | 1 | 200 | 624 | 37 | 329,769,527 |
| Missouri | 4 | 130 | 405 | 25 | 199,486,520 |
| Montana | 5 | 730 | 2,943 | 67 | 1,251,467,434 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 521 | 136 | 11 | 882,218,547 |
| Nevada | 8 | 4,269 | 15,048 | 686 | 7,315,278,391 |
| New Hampshire | 2 | 130 | 405 | 25 | 219,864,228 |
| New Jersey | 2 | 2,363 | 578 | 334 | 15,043,735,180 |
| New Mexico | 2 | 555 | 2,477 | 58 | 915,635,655 |
| New York | 23 | 1,887 | 7,816 | 117 | 3,372,875,342 |
| North Carolina | 10 | 496 | 1,547 | 96 | 824,324,726 |
| North Dakota | 2 | 550 | 144 | 10 | 932,702,778 |
| Ohio | 9 | 1,745 | 6,575 | 257 | 2,894,868,261 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 693 | 422 | 27 | 1,166,484,989 |
| Oregon | 6 | 71 | 280 | 10 | 114,954,478 |
| Pennsylvania | 13 | 864 | 2,524 | 147 | 1,399,748,175 |
| Rhode Island | 1 | 10 | 31 | 2 | 15,759,439 |
| South Carolina | 12 | 619 | 2,799 | 66 | 1,045,647,402 |
| Texas | 64 | 13,440 | 58,157 | 1,281 | 23,501,940,605 |
| Unknown | 3 | 1,346 | 1,958 | 174 | 6,734,947,632 |
| Utah | 2 | 75 | 457 | 0 | 136,428,757 |
| Virginia | 14 | 2,170 | 8,679 | 264 | 3,584,591,753 |
| Washington | 3 | 360 | 1,548 | 20 | 630,210,890 |
| Wisconsin | 1 | 75 | 458 | 0 | 165,835,999 |
| Wyoming | 2 | 619 | 162 | 10 | 1,089,228,185 |