U.S. Power Plant Data
US Energy Information Administration. 2024. "U.S. Power Plants." Updated June. https://atlas.eia.gov/datasets/bf5c5110b1b944d299bb683cdbd02d2a_0/explore.
This data identifies operable electric generating plants in the United States by energy source, as of June 2024.
The attribute data for this point dataset come from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, EIA-860, Annual Electric Generator Report; EIA-860M, Monthly Update to the Annual Electric Generator Report; and EIA-923, Power Plant Operations Report. It includes all operable plants by energy source with a combined nameplate capacity of 1 megawatt or more that are operating, are on standby, or out of service for short- or long-term.
Definitions from: https://www.eia.gov/tools/glossary/index.php
OBJECTID
Unique feature ID number from the original shapefile
Plant_Code
EIA-assigned plant identification number
Plant_Name
Name of the power plant
Utility_ID
EIA-assigned identification number for the company that is responsible for
the day-to-day operations of the generator
Utility_Name
Name of the company that is responsible for the day-to-day operations of
the generator
sector_name
- Commercial CHP: Commercial combined heat and power. A plant designed to produce both heat and electricity from a single heat source. Note: This term is being used in place of the term "cogenerator" that was used by EIA in the past. CHP better describes the facilities because some of the plants included do not produce heat and power in a sequential fashion and, as a result, do not meet the legal definition of cogeneration specified in the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA).
- Commercial Non-CHP: Commercial electricity generation that does not make use of heat.
- Electric Utility: A corporation, person, agency, authority, or other legal entity or instrumentality aligned with distribution facilities for delivery of electric energy for use primarily by the public. Included are investor-owned electric utilities, municipal and State utilities, Federal electric utilities, and rural electric cooperatives. A few entities that are tariff based and corporately aligned with companies that own distribution facilities are also included.
- Industrial CHP: Industrial combined heat and power
- Industrial Non-CHP: Industrial electricity generation that does not make use of heat
- IPP CHP: Independent power producer of combined heat and power
- IPP Non-CHP: Independent power producer that does not make use of heat
Street_Address
City
City location of power plant
County
County location of power plant
State
Full name of the state where the plant is located
Zip
Zip code of power plant
PrimSource
The predominant type of energy that fuels the generator. The primary
energy source is determined by net summer capacity.
- biomass
- coal
- geothermal
- hydroelectric
- natural gas
- nuclear
- other
- petroleum
- pumped storage
- solar
- wind
source_desc
Brief description of the plant fuel and nameplate capacity
tech_desc
The type(s) of technology (prime mover). The engine, turbine, water wheel,
or similar machine that drives an electric generator; or, for reporting
purposes, a device that converts energy to electricity directly (e.g.,
photovoltaic solar and fuel cells).
Install_MW
The total combined generator nameplate capacity (installed). Installed
capacity is determined by the highest value on the generator nameplate in
megawatts rounded to the nearest tenth. The maximum rated output of a
generator, prime mover, or other electric power production equipment under
specific conditions designated by the manufacturer and expressed in megawatts
(MW).
Total_MW
The maximum output, as measured in alternating current (AC), commonly
expressed in megawatts (MW), that generating equipment can supply to system
load, as demonstrated by a multi-hour test, at the time of summer peak demand
(period of June 1 through September 30.) This output reflects a reduction in
capacity due to electricity use for station service or auxiliaries.
Bat_MW
Net summer capacity of battery powered electric generators in megawatts
(MW)
Bio_MW
Net summer capacity of biomass electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Coal_MW
Net summer capacity of coal-fired electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Geo_MW
Net summer capacity of geothermal powered electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Hydro_MW
Net summer capacity of hydroelectric generators in megawatts (MW)
HydroPS_MW
Net summer capacity of pumped-storage hydroelectric generators in megawatts (MW)
NG_MW
Net summer capacity of natural gas fired electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Nuclear_MW
Net summer capacity of nuclear power electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Crude_MW
Net summer capacity of petroleum-fired electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Solar_MW
Net summer capacity of solar powered electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Wind_MW
Net summer capacity of wind turbine electric generators in megawatts (MW)
Other_MW
Net summer capacity of electric generators powered by other energy sources
not specified in the other categories in megawatts (MW). These include energy
storage technologies (e.g., compressed air, batteries, and fly wheels),
purchased steam, waste heat not directly attributed to a fuel source, and
tire-derived fuels.
Source
The EIA source surveys for the power plants map data
Period
The reporting period (currency) of the data (yyyymm)
Latitude
WGS 84 Latitude
Longitude
WGS 84 Longitude