Hemlock’s new ingot and wafer facility is coming online in Q3, which means that the United States now has the capacity to produce every major component of the solar supply chain.
Furthermore, 65 new or expanded solar and storage facilities have come online in 2025. This has brought $4.5 billion in private investment flowing into American communities.
According to SEIA’s Solar & Storage Supply Chain Dashboard, since the end of 2024, US manufacturing capacity has increased across every major segment of the solar and storage supply chain. As of October 2025, the United States has surpassed 60 gigawatts (GW) of domestic solar module production capacity, a 37 percent increase from December 2024.
The surge in production of downstream components like modules has ensured there is sufficient demand for upstream manufacturing. Since the end of 2024, US solar cell production capacity has more than tripled, rising from 1 GW to 3.2 GW.
Battery cell manufacturing for stationary electricity storage applications has risen to over 21 gigawatt-hours (GWh), which is enough to power the city of Houston from sunset to sunrise.
“This growth is a testament to the power of American innovation” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of SEIA. “We’re building factories, hiring American workers, and showing that solar energy means made-in-America energy.”
US manufacturing of inverters, which converts electricity produced by solar and stored by energy storage into usable power for the electric grid and most home appliances, has grown by nearly 50 percent since the end of last year, with capacity surging from 19 GW to 28 GW. US mounting system manufacturing has also continued to grow since 2024, growing 14 percent and adding 23 new factories.
The US solar manufacturing pipeline remains robust, with 23 GW of solar module capacity, over 34 GW of solar cell capacity, 25 GW of inverter capacity, and 95 GWh of battery cell capacity under construction or announced.
The bad news of course is that over 100 factories and over $31 billion in the pipeline could be at risk if the Trump administration continues its attacks on solar energy. Trump Administration policies, regulations, and trade actions which have contributed to industry uncertainty could stall progress and dampen demand for the products produced by America’s solar and storage manufacturers.
“We’re seeing strong growth today, but that momentum isn’t guaranteed” added Ms Hopper. “If the administration continues down this path, they risk driving investment overseas, stifling job creation, raising costs on consumers, and handing America’s manufacturing advantage to our competitors. This industry has proven what’s possible when businesses have the certainty to invest. If the administration does not reverse their harmful actions that have undermined market certainty, energy costs will rise even further, and the next wave of factories and jobs could be at risk.”
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