NREL, July 26, 2012 - A new study of
renewable energy's technical potential finds that every state in
the nation has the space and resource to generate clean
energy.
The U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy
Laboratory produced the study, U.S. RE Technical Potential, which looks at
available renewable resources in each state. It establishes an
upper-boundary estimate of development potential. Economic or
market restraints would factor into what projects might actually be
deployed.
The report is valuable for decision-makers and utility
executives because it compares estimates across six renewable
energy technologies and unifies assumptions and methods. It shows
the achievable energy generation of a particular technology given
resource availability - solar, wind, geothermal availability, etc.
-- system performance, topographic limitations, and environmental
and land-use constraints.
The study includes state-level maps and
tables containing available land area (square kilometers),
installed capacity (gigawatts), and electric generation
(gigawatt-hours) for each technology.

"Decision-makers using the study will get a sense of scale
regarding the potential for renewables, and which technologies are
worth examining," said NREL's Anthony Lopez, a co-author of the
study. "Energy modelers also will find the study valuable."
"This is intended to be a living document," NREL's Donna
Heimiller, another co-author, added. "We'll be frequently updating
the information as we get more data."
For more information go to the NREL website: http://www.nrel.gov/gis/re_potential.html.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national
laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and
development. NREL is operated for DOE by the Alliance for
Sustainable Energy, LLC.