Two plants in Bartow County and Dalton, Georgia, are part
of solar panel maker Qcells’ commitment to invest $2.5
billion in the U.S. solar supply chain and create 2,500
jobs in Georgia alone.
Rendering courtesy of Qcells
The virtual ink had barely dried on last week’s Site Selection
Snapshot about promising clean energy project and
job data when First Solar and Maxeon Solar Technologies the
very next day each announced billion-dollar
manufacturing projects in Louisiana and New Mexico,
respectively.
Now there are even more data. On Monday, E2 (Environmental
Entrepreneurs), which calls itself a national, nonpartisan
group of business leaders, investors, and professionals “who
advocate for smart policies that are good for the economy
and good for the environment,” released “Clean Economy Works:
IRA One-Year Review,” which contains data and ranks
states based on 210 clean energy projects announced across
the nation since the Inflation Reduction Act went into
effect exactly one year ago today.
States in the South and Upper Midwest are leading the way,
starting with No. 1 Georgia:
Top 10 States by Projects
State
Projects
Est. Investment
Est. Jobs
Georgia
19
$12.3 Billion
12,791
South Carolina
18
$10.9 Billion
10,272
Michigan
18
$9.1 Billion
10,090
Ohio
13
$6.4 Billion
3,839
Tennessee
13
$5.2 Billion
4,110
Texas
13
$5.2 Billion
4,193
New York
10
$783 Million
2,739
North Carolina
9
$9.9 Billion
3,656
Arizona
8
$5.9 Billion
2,280
California
8
$1.5 Billion
N/A
Source: E2
ADVERTISEMENT
All told, the projects if completed as planned would create
at least 74,181 new jobs and bring a minimum of $86.3
billion in new private investment to 39 states. Nearly half
of the projects come from foreign
companies, and 62% of them are in the electric
vehicle and battery sectors.
And the list is up to date: The final two projects tallied
were the August 10 announcements by First Solar and Maxeon.
Top Projects By Sector*
Sector
Projects
Est. Job
Est. Investments
Electric Vehicles
97
45,911
$56.1 Billion
Solar
44
15,084
$9.9 Billion
Battery/Storage
35
8,028
$12.4 Billion
Wind
18
2,543
$1.7 Billion
Hydrogen
12
2,434
$5.1 Billion
Grid/Electrification
12
905
$1.5 Billion
*some projects categorized in multiple
sectors
Source: E2
The E2 report quotes Scott Moskowitz, senior director of
market strategy and public affairs at solar panel
manufacturer Qcells, about the company’s ongoing sequence of
investments in that state, where there is a pronounced
contingent of Korean clean tech companies in
particular:
“The IRA has spurred massive investments in renewable energy
over the past year, and Qcells is absolutely a part of
that,” he says. “This January we announced a $2.5 billion
investment in domestic manufacturing to build out the U.S.
solar supply chain and create thousands of jobs on American
soil — and hundreds of other companies are doing the same.”
It didn’t take long to take effect: In March, Qcells
supplier Hanwha Advanced Materials Georgia (HAGA) committed
to build a $147 million, 160-job advanced materials
manufacturing facility in Bartow County, Georgia, that will
supply Qcells with Encapsulant film, materials used to
encapsulate solar cells and ensure long-term panel
durability.
In Coweta County, lithium-ion battery maker FREYR Battery is
pursuing its own growth strategy. Jason Peace, senior vice
president of business development for the company says the
IRA’s passage “led FREYR to accelerate their plans to build
out the initial two phases of the GigaAmerica plant in
Georgia where we will have nameplate production capacity of
38GWh and employ over 700.”
E2’s methodology was strict: It did not count projects if
they were announced prior to August 16, 2022. “This analysis
also does not include federal 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.,” the organization explains, noting that
156 of the 210 announcements include investment data and 142
of the 210 announcements include job estimates, “making this
information very conservative.”
Three Bollinger Motors team members
celebrated in July as the company launched
pilot builds of the B4 all-electric Class 4
chassis in partnership with Roush
Industries, Inc. One week later, Bollinger,
which moved to a new HQ in Oak Park three
years ago this week to accommodate rapid
growth, received a $3 million job creation
grant from the State of Michigan, tied for
second by number of projects in E2’s new
report.
Photo courtesy of Bollinger Motors
Among the report’s highlights:
Republican districts accounted for 60% of the jobs
estimated to be created and 63% of the new investments.
Democratic districts are home to 60 of the announced
developments, $18.4 billion of the total investments,
and 16,000 of the jobs estimated to be created. The
report breaks out details about leading congressional
districts.
Manufacturing accounted 171 of the 210 projects, 91% of
total new estimated private investments and 95% of the
estimated new jobs added by all projects.
Solar energy accounted for the second most announcements
among clean energy sectors with 44, including 29 new or
expanded facilities for manufacturing solar parts and
panels.
Announcements made by companies based in U.S. states
were led Michigan (20), California (17), Massachusetts
(11), North Carolina (11), Texas (10), and Arizona (8).
Announcements made by foreign-based companies based
outside the U.S. were led by South Korea (25), Canada
(12), Japan (11), Germany (10), China (6).
Projects by Top Type
Industry
Type
Projects
Est. Job
Est. Investments
Manufacturing
171
70,334
$78.2 Billion
Generation
30
3,727
$7.6 Billion
R&D
7
120
$430 Million
Later this month, on August 28, E2 will release its eighth
annual Clean Jobs America report at www.cleanjobsamerica.e2.org.
The report will feature an interactive map where users will
be able to explore a variety of local and state data
including job growth and job per capita by locality,
comparisons to overall energy industry employment including
fossil fuels and gas and diesel vehicles, subsector jobs
data by metro, state, and county, and rankings by total
clean energy jobs, density (employment per 1,000 overall
jobs), and employment growth.
Too late for E2’s new report but sure to be
tallied for next year’s is the 75-MW,
200,000-panel, one-square-mile Electrify
America Solar Glow installation that went
into commercial operation yesterday in San
Bernardino County, California, as part of a
15-year virtual power purchase agreement
(VPPA) with developer Terra-Gen.