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Annual Energy Outlook 2026 Explores U.S. Energy Futures Through 2050

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Summary

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) released the Annual Energy Outlook 2026 (AEO2026), projecting U.S. energy futures through 2050 across 11 alternative scenarios. Key findings show national electricity demand has risen 2.1% annually over the past five years and is projected to grow at an average annual rate of 0.9%–1.6% per year through 2050, driven primarily by data center load. Natural gas production is projected to grow from 107 Bcf/d in 2025 to between 133 Bcf/d and 151 Bcf/d by 2050, while U.S. crude oil production remains relatively stable at 12.4–12.7 million b/d by 2050 compared with 13.6 million b/d in 2025.

“Data center load is emerging as the dominant driver of long-term U.S. electricity growth.”

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The EIA released AEO2026, a comprehensive suite of alternative futures analysis for U.S. energy through 2050. The report projects that installed electric generating capacity will increase 50%–90% by 2050, with natural gas, solar, and wind accounting for combined 80% of generation. Coal demand depends on 2024 power-sector emissions regulations—if enforced, coal generation is projected to mostly disappear from the power sector.

For energy sector participants, AEO2026 provides planning-level projections across technology, consumption, and policy scenarios. The report's projections for natural gas pipeline infrastructure buildout to the U.S. Gulf Coast, stable Permian Basin oil output, and increasing petroleum liquids exports may inform investment and infrastructure decisions. The scenarios offer a reference framework for anticipating potential regulatory outcomes and market conditions.

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Apr 23, 2026

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U.S. ENERGY INFORMATION ADMINISTRATION
WASHINGTON DC 20585

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 8, 2026

EIA releases the Annual Energy Outlook 2026

The Annual Energy Outlook 2026 (AEO2026) explores medium- and long-term alternative futures in the United States through 2050. AEO2026 enables the public to explore a suite of alternative pathways for our energy future depending on assumptions made about markets, technological breakthroughs, and policy. It includes a narrative report, as well as the full set of data tables and visualizations, assumptions and methodologies, and detailed descriptions of the 11 cases we ran to explore these alternative futures.

"AEO2026 is best understood as a product suite for alternative futures analysis, not a set of predictions," EIA Administrator Tristan Abbey said.

Key takeaways include:

  • Technology drives more efficient consumption of energy in the United States through 2050. Energy consumption remains relatively flat or decreases slightly through 2050 in most of our cases despite economic growth of 1.2%–2.2% in our projections. Newer technologies deployed across the economy tend to be more efficient, reducing the energy needed to produce the same goods and services. In most of our cases, end-use energy consumption decreases in the transportation sector and is relatively flat in the residential and commercial sector despite increasing data center electricity demand.

  • Data center load is emerging as the dominant driver of long-term U.S. electricity growth. After a decade-plus plateau, national electricity demand has risen 2.1% annually over the past five years and is projected to grow at an average annual rate of 0.9%–1.6% per year through 2050 across our cases.

  • To meet growing electricity demand, installed electric generating capacity increases between 50% and 90% by 2050 across cases, shaped by natural gas prices and renewable technology costs. Natural gas, solar, and wind supply the most electricity generation capacity growth and account for a combined 80% of generation in most cases by 2050.

  • Natural gas production grows significantly, from 107 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) in 2025 to between 133 Bcf/d and 151 Bcf/d by 2050 in most cases, driven by domestic and international demand. Production growth is strongest in the East region, which includes the low-cost Appalachian Basin. This growth requires pipeline infrastructure buildout to move this natural gas to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

  • With only modestly increasing Brent crude oil prices over the long term and dwindling prime drilling acreage, U.S. crude oil production remains relatively stable, decreasing slightly by 2050. Production is between 12.4 million barrels per day (b/d) and 12.7 million b/d by 2050 in most cases compared with 13.6 million b/d produced in 2025, with the Permian Basin remaining the key area for U.S. onshore oil output. The United States remains a net exporter of petroleum in nearly all the cases, with petroleum liquids exports in particular increasing.

  • Future U.S. coal demand depends on environmental policy as coal plant retirements drive coal demand even lower. If 2024 power-sector emissions regulations are enforced, coal generation is projected to mostly disappear from the power sector. This continues the trend of the past 15 years, during which coal power capacity was retired and replaced with natural gas and renewable generation capacity. Without the regulations, some coal-fired power remains.
    The full Annual Energy Outlook 2026 is available on the EIA website.

The product described in this press release was prepared by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy. By law, EIA’s data, analysis, and forecasts are independent of approval by any other officer or employee of the U.S. government. The views in the product and this press release therefore should not be construed as representing those of the U.S. Department of Energy or other federal agencies. EIA Program Contact: Mala Kline, Mala.Kline@eia.gov
EIA Press Contact: Morgan Butterfield, EIAMedia@eia.gov

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
EIA
Published
April 8th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Energy companies Government agencies Investors
Industry sector
2210 Electric Utilities
Activity scope
Energy forecasting Electricity generation Natural gas production
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Energy
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Electric Utilities Environmental Protection

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