--- id: energy/us/interconnection-queue/status-2025 canonical_question: "What is the current state of US electricity interconnection queues?" aliases: - "interconnection backlog US" - "grid connection wait times" - "FERC interconnection queue delays" - "how long to connect to the grid" entity_type: situation_assessment domain: energy > grid_infrastructure > interconnection region: US temporal_scope: 2024-2025 last_verified: 2025-04-15 confidence: 0.9 freshness: quarterly version: 1.0 first_published: 2025-03-01 canonical_source: "https://knowledgelib.io/energy/us/interconnection-queue/status-2025" suggested_citation: "Source: knowledgelib.io — AI Knowledge Library (verified 2025-04-15)" sources: - id: src1 title: "Queued Up: Characteristics of Power Plants Seeking Transmission Interconnection" author: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory url: https://emp.lbl.gov/queued-up type: primary_research published: 2024-04-01 reliability: high - id: src2 title: "FERC Order 2023 Final Rule" author: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission url: https://www.ferc.gov/media/order-no-2023 type: government_regulation published: 2023-07-28 reliability: authoritative - id: src3 title: "2024 Annual Grid Connection Report" author: American Clean Power Association url: https://cleanpower.org/resources/grid-report-2024 type: industry_report published: 2024-09-12 reliability: moderate_high --- # US Interconnection Queue Status (2025) ## Summary The US interconnection queue remains the primary bottleneck in energy transition deployment. As of early 2025, approximately 2,600 GW of generation and storage capacity sits in interconnection queues — roughly double the entire installed US generation fleet. Average wait times are 4-5 years from application to commercial operation. [src1, src3] ## Key Facts - Queue depth: ~2,600 GW total capacity waiting (up from ~2,000 GW in 2023) [src1] - Completion rate: Only ~14% of projects entering the queue since 2000 have reached commercial operation [src1] - Average timeline: 4-5 years from request to operation; was ~3 years a decade ago [src1, src3] - Dominant technology: Solar (65%) and storage (25%) dominate new queue entries [src1] - Cost: Interconnection study costs alone range $50K-$2M+ depending on size and complexity [src3] ## Regulatory Context FERC Order 2023 (effective 2024) introduced cluster-based study processes and financial readiness requirements to reduce speculative applications. Early signs suggest new application volumes may moderate, but the existing backlog will take years to clear. [src2] ## Causal Factors 1. Speculative applications: Low barriers to entry led to queue flooding [src2] 2. Transmission capacity: Insufficient grid buildout to absorb new generation [src3] 3. Study process: Serial study approach created cascading delays when projects withdrew [src2] 4. Workforce: Insufficient engineering staff at utilities and ISOs to process studies [src3] ## Trend Direction Mixed. Reform is underway but structural backlog persists. Expect: - Modest improvement in new application processing (2025-2026) - Legacy backlog remains severe through ~2027 - Transmission buildout is the binding constraint long-term ## Related Units