Latest
The document lists eight policy areas that SEIA said are ‘critical’ for local, state and federal authorities . Image: Erlend Bjørtvedt, Wikimedia Commons.
The US Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) has released a policy blueprint that it claims would “strengthen the reliability of America’s electric grid with solar and storage technologies.”
The document lists eight policy areas that SEIA said are “critical” for local, state and federal authorities to meet “skyrocketing energy demands of AI, data centres and new American innovation”.
This article requires Premium Subscription Basic (FREE) Subscription
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Try Premium for just $1
Full premium access for the first month at only $1
Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
Cancel anytime during the trial period
Premium Benefits
Expert industry analysis and interviews
Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
Exclusive event discounts
Or continue reading this article for free
The policies are: a focus on domestic manufacturing and US supply chains; a “regulatory fast-track” for PV and storage projects to meet data centre demand; reforms to the interconnection process and direction for power utilities; modernising transmission infrastructure; investing in long-duration energy storage technology; reforms to the wholesale electricity market; changes to utilities’ integrated resource plans (IRP); and incentivising distributed energy resources like virtual power plants (VPP) and microgrids.
“The reliability of our electric grid – and America’s ability to meet future energy demand – depend on adding more solar and storage to the energy mix,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of SEIA.
“Today, reliable low-cost solar and storage account for the vast majority of the new power generation being built in America. If this administration is serious about winning the AI race, we need policymakers at every level to put in place commonsense, grid-strengthening policies that accelerate solar and storage deployment.”
SEIA, an industry representative group for the solar and energy storage industries, said it would be “advocating for this agenda” at state and federal government level.
Policy shifting against US renewables
Clean energy technologies – particularly solar PV and wind – have taken a policy beating in recent weeks. July’s budget reconciliation bill brought an early end to the federal incentives to build renewable energy generation projects and was followed by an executive order that imposed tighter rules around qualification for the credits.
Manufacturing has also been affected by foreign entity of concern (FEOC) rules, which prohibit the use of Chinese components or Chinese backing in US solar supply chains, if companies wish to receive the 45X advanced manufacturing tax credit.
Energy storage deployments have been less drastically affected, though FEOC restrictions will still apply to battery manufacturers.
The effects of these changes are yet to be seen. PV Tech reported yesterday that the US added almost 18GW of solar PV in the first half of 2025, and the Energy Information Administration (EIA) has forecast that the country will see almost 40GW by year’s end, as well as over 18GW of new battery storage capacity.
However, SEIA itself predicts that the market will slow in the coming years, largely as a result of the policy changes in the budget reconciliation bill. It expects that the US will install 21% less solar PV by the end of the decade than it would have done in the previous policy environment.
This decline comes as solar PV and energy storage continue to account for the overwhelming majority of new power capacity in the US. In the first half of the year the two technologies accounted for 82% of all new energy capacity on the US grid. US electricity demand, particularly from the growth of AI and data centres, is set to continue to rise and solar – particularly with storage – represents an affordable and fast way to power that boom.
You can read SEIA’s full policy blueprint here.
San Francisco Bay Area, USA
PV Tech has been running an annual PV CellTech Conference since 2016. PV CellTech USA, on 7-8 October 2025 is our third PV CellTech conference dedicated to the U.S. manufacturing sector. The events in 2023 and 2024 were a sell out success and 2025 will once again gather the key stakeholders from PV manufacturing, equipment/materials, policy-making and strategy, capital equipment investment and all interested downstream channels and third-party entities. The goal is simple: to map out PV manufacturing in the U.S. out to 2030 and beyond.
Returning for its 12th edition, Solar and Storage Finance USA Summit remains the annual event where decision-makers at the forefront of solar and storage projects across the United States and capital converge. Featuring the most active solar and storage transactors, join us for a packed two-days of deal-making, learning and networking.
Large Scale Solar Central and Eastern Europe continues to be the place to leverage a network that has been made over more than 10 years, to build critical partnerships to develop solar projects throughout the region.
PV Tech has been running PV ModuleTech Conferences since 2017. PV ModuleTech USA, on 16-17 June 2026, will be our fifth PV ModulelTech conference dedicated to the U.S. utility scale solar sector. The event will gather the key stakeholders from solar developers, solar asset owners and investors, PV manufacturing, policy-making and and all interested downstream channels and third-party entities. The goal is simple: to map out the PV module supply channels to the U.S. out to 2027 and beyond.
Read Next
US solar tracker manufacturer Nextracker has acquired Origami Solar, a steel frame technology-focused company, for approximately US$53 million.
Leading solar industry professionals discussed the importance of US solar PV manufacturing at the RE+ trade show in Las Vegas, US.
Australia’s National Electricity Market (NEM) broke records yesterday when renewables supplied 76.4% of total electricity demand, with solar power contributing nearly 60% of the record-breaking clean energy mix.
The US installed 17.92GW of new capacity in the first half of 2025, with quarterly declines in additions for utility-scale and residential solar.
German inverter manufacturer SMA Solar is to restart US manufacturing for the first time in ten years.
Euclid Power has raised US$20 million Series A round led by Venrock to develop AI-driven platform and services for renewables.
Subscribe to Newsletter
Most Read
Upcoming Events
https://www.pv-tech.org/seia-releases-policy-recommendations-for-us-solar-and-storage/