North America Energy Transition Market Analysis by Sectors (Power, Electrical Vehicles, Renewable Fuels, Hydrogen and CCS/CCU) and Trends
Summary
North America’s energy transition is gaining pace. The decreasing cost of renewable energy is driving the decline of thermal power in North America, with forecasts predicting that renewable energy will account for 65% of power capacity in 2035. Meanwhile increasing support from government policies and tax credits will facilitate the further growth of electric vehicles as well as less developed technologies such as low-carbon hydrogen and carbon capture.The energy transition in North America is gaining steam due to both the global momentum behind the sector and the Biden administration’s support. Recent laws such as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Inflation Reduction Act, and other initiatives are beginning to funnel billions of dollars into the sector and reduce the green premium on emerging technologies like green hydrogen and carbon capture. Thermal power’s presence within North America’s power mix will continue to decrease to 32% of power generation in 2035. In comparison, a strong build out will see renewables hold 65% of power capacity in 2035. As a result, emission free energy (including large hydropower) will account for 56% of the region’s power generation in the same year. A combination of government policies, tax credits, higher gasoline prices, and growing environmental consciousness among consumers will increase the demand for electric vehicles within the North America market. As a result, electric vehicles will exceed 75% of the light vehicle market in Canada and the US. The US will also remain a global leader in ethanol production, boosting North America’s renewable fuel production to 10,700 mmgy by 2030. North America is one of the world’s most active regions for carbon capture, accounting for 63% of global capacity in 2021. 156 projects of varying size are in the pipeline to commence operations by 2030. North America has also seen plenty of activity in the low-carbon hydrogen space, including the announcement of the world’s two largest projects in eastern Canada by Green Hydrogen International. In addition, North America is one of the most attractive regions for blue hydrogen due to abundant natural gas and favorable conditions for geological CO2 storage.
Key Highlights
Gas has been the largest power generation source in North America since 2015, and will continue to produce 25% of the region’s electricity through to 2035.
Coal power is set to decrease its generation share from 24% in 2018 to just 6% in 2035, while solar PV will increase from 2% to 26% across the same time frame.
By 2035, nearly 56% of the region’s power generation is expected to be emissions free when large hydropower is included, up from 24% in 2018.
Scope
Current leaders within North America’s Energy Transition
Renewable Energy Policies and Economics
Power Capacity Share Outlook
Power Generation Share Outlook
Renewable Generation Share by Country, 2021 - 2035
Thermal Power: Decommissioning and Emissions
Major Players in Renewable Power
Electric Vehicle Production Forecasts for North America and EV’s Share of Light Vehicles
Electric Vehicles Policies and Support
Largest Active and Upcoming Renewable Refineries in North America
Renewable Fuels Outlook
Renewable Fuels Policies and Support
CCUS capacity, 2018 - 2030 and Share by End Use Sector
CCUS Policy
CCUS Projects
National Hydrogen Strategies of Canada and the US
Hydrogen Capacity, 2018 - 2030
Case Studies of Hydrogen End Use Sectors
Reasons to Buy
Obtain the most up to date information on recent developments and policies for North America’s energy transition.
Identify opportunities in upcoming projects involving electric vehicles, solar and wind power generation, EVs, CCS and hydrogen production in North America.
Assess competitors based on their active and pipeline capacities for renewable energy generation, CCS/CCU projects and hydrogen projects
Develop business strategies by identifying the most promising sectors for future growth
Executive Summary
Sector Grid and Leaders
Power Outlook and Generation
Renewable Energy: Policies and Economic
Power Capacity Share Outlook
Share of Power and Renewable Generation
Share of Renewable Generation by Country
Thermal Power Decommissioning and Emissions
Major players: Solar vs Wind owners
Electric Vehicles
EV Production and Adoption Forecasts
Regional EV Policies
Renewable Fuels
Active and Upcoming Renewable Fuel Projects
Production and Consumption Forecasts
Regional Policies
CCUS Capacity Forecasts
Regional CCUS Policies
Active and Upcoming CCUS Projects
Hydrogen
Regional Hydrogen Policies
Active and Upcoming Hydrogen Projects
Hydrogen Capacity and End Use Sectors
Contact Us
List of Tables
Sector Grid and Leaders for Energy Transition Technologies
Renewable Energy Policies and Strategies
Solar Power Top EPCs and Equipment Manufacturers
Wind Power Top EPCs and Equipment Manufacturers
Active and Upcoming Renewable Refineries Projects in North America
Active and Upcoming CCUS Projects in North America
Active and Upcoming Low-Carbon Hydrogen Projects in North America
Examples of Hydrogen Developments in North America
List of Figures
US Average LCOE
North America power capacity share, 2018 - 2035
Power generation share, 2018 - 2035
Renewable energy generation by type, 2018 - 2035
Renewable share of total generation, 2021- 2035
Decommissioning and upcoming thermal capacity, 2023 - 2035
North America thermal power carbon emissions, 2018 - 2030
Major solar power owners in North America by capacity
Major wind power owners in North America by capacity
Electric vehicle production in North America, 2018 - 2035
Proportion of EVs in North America light vehicle market, 2018 - 2035
North America renewable fuel production capacity, 2018 - 2030
North America renewable fuel consumption, 2018 - 2040
North America CCUS capacity, 2018 - 2030
North America end use sectors for CCUS capacity in 2030
North America hydrogen capacity, 2018 - 2030
Number of hydrogen plants supplying end use sectors in North America in 2030