Power and Renewables

Interconnection Queue Review: Arizona Public Service

byEvan Powell

Arizona Public Service (APS) is the largest energy provider in Arizona, serving about 1.4 million customers across the state. Its territory has emerged as a prime location for renewable energy and battery storage development, largely due to Arizona’s abundant solar resources.

As part of Enverus Project Tracking Analytics, we review project development processes within each utility and interconnection queue across the U.S. to provide a comprehensive project overview.

By delving into trends within the APS interconnection queue, we can gain insight into how APS has nurtured this development, and what the future of the region’s energy landscape will look like.

APS’s place in the nationwide energy landscape

Figure 1- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Most planned capacity by utility queue

The APS territory is one of the nation’s leaders for power generation development, particularly in renewables and storage. Adding to the rush, the Phoenix area has become a hotbed of data center development as well. Of the 20 major utilities across the nation that we currently track (not including ISOs), APS has the third-most total planned capacity in the queue, trailing only the Bonneville Power Authority and Pacificorp. It also has the third-most planned capacity specifically in each individual category of wind, solar and storage project types as well, reflecting its emphasis on expanding sustainable generation capabilities to support growth.

Figure 2- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Most total planned capacity by county

On a county level, APS’s prominence is clear. Four of the top 10 counties in the U.S. for total planned capacity are in APS’s territory, including Maricopa County, which leads overall. Additionally, four APS counties are in the top 10 for planned solar capacity and three for storage.

Figure 3- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Most total planned capacity by state

On a state level, Arizona has the third most total planned capacity in the nation, behind only Texas and California. It has the third most planned storage capacity and the second most planned solar capacity.

Taking the lead in the energy transition

Figure 4- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Total capacity added to APS queue, by project
type and first queue date

From 2016-2021, there was a rapid and consistent year-over-year uptick in power generation capacity added to the APS Interconnection Queue, comprising almost exclusively renewables and storage projects. Queue activity has cooled slightly since that peak in 2021 but is still consistently far higher than it was before. And as discussed in the previous section, far higher than most of the rest of the country.

Figure 5- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Projected capacity changes by fuel type over next 15 years, via the most recent IRP goals from APS

Figure 6- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Operating Capacity in APS by First Power Date

That trend is in line with the most recent APS Integrated Resource Plan, which indicates a commitment to shifting the energy mix away from fossil fuels like coal and towards renewables and storage over the next 15 years. And they are already beginning to deliver on that promise. In 2024 alone the Babbitt Ranch Wind and Chevelon Butte 1 & 2 Wind projects were all brought online, totaling 615 MW of capacity. This followed a productive year for storage projects in 2023, when 251 MW of storage capacity (spread across nine projects) were brought online. The specific project types are different than the IRP projected; it called for more solar thus far and less wind. However, the total renewables plus storage projection for the years 2023 and 2024 was 795 MW, which has been outpaced thus far by the 866 MW built.

Figure 6- Enverus P&R Project Tracking: Operating capacity in APS by first power date

One other interesting feature of the IRP is its approach towards natural gas. In sum, the utility plans to add 409 MW of natural gas over the next 15 years. However, it plans to arrive at that number through a combination of both building but also decommissioning thousands of MWs of natural gas plants, beginning around the year 2030. It appears that they want to more or less maintain their current levels of natural gas usage, but are in a position where they need to invest heavily in the resource in order to do so. That investment indicates that APS has no plans to completely abandon traditional energy sources like gas, even if it isn’t as prominent in their plans as renewables are.

Looking to the future

The alignment between the APS IRP and the interconnection queue is a very encouraging sign for future growth. Currently, 34% of the operating APS energy mix is renewables or storage. If the next 15 years of development continue to proceed as the IRP lays out, it will add 4,951 MW of renewables and storage capacity and 409 MW of natural gas, resulting in an energy mix that is 64% renewables or storage.

So, what can these trends tell us about the overall future of the APS energy landscape? The data paints an appropriately sunny picture for the state of Arizona. With the amount of development already underway and a strong track record behind them, Arizona Public Service looks poised to maintain its status as one of the leaders of the energy transition.

Want to explore power projects and developer profiles? Learn more about Project Tracking Analytics.

Explore Solution

Picture of Evan Powell

Evan Powell

Evan Powell joined Enverus in 2020 as a research analyst on the Power and Renewables team. His focus areas include tracking power generation, transmission and LMP data within the CAISO region and integrating the Energy Information Administration (EIA) and utility queues data into Enverus PRISM®. He graduated from the Colorado School of Mines with a Bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Master’s in Engineering and Technology Management.

Subscribe to the Enverus Blog

A weekly update on the latest “no-fluff” insight and analysis of the energy industry.

Related Content

Enverus releases Top 50 Public E&P Operators of 2024
Energy Market Wrap
ByEnverus

Western buys Brazos for $1.6B, Keyera pushes its Plains deal, Expro adds MPD tech, Chevron holds steady, and Exxon expects tight markets to persist.

Enverus Press Release - Enverus Earns Top Workplaces Honors for Fourth Consecutive Year
Trading and Risk
ByChris Griggs

In energy trading, risk problems do not always begin with the risk model. Often, they begin much earlier in the disconnected workflows surrounding the decision itself: By the time the full picture comes together, the moment to respond may already...

Enverus Press Release - Enverus honored as one of Alberta’s leading employers
Minerals
BySusie Yuill

In mineral acquisition, there’s a gap between how fast title needs to happen and how fast it actually happens. Deals close in days. Manual title takes weeks. That gap is where acquisitions are won and lost. Most mineral buyers have...

Enverus Media Advisory - Trump vs. Harris: A tale of two energy policies
Energy Transition
ByCarson Kearl, Enverus Intelligence® Research (EIR) Contributor

Hyperscaler capex surge fuels data center demand and forces investors to weigh AI-driven revenue versus higher spending.

Enverus Intelligence® Research Press Release - Until LNG demand arrives, natural gas expected to struggle at $3
Energy Market Wrap
ByEnverus

Shell acquires ARC in a C$22B deal, Helix and Hornbeck merge, KKR exits Pembina Gas Infrastructure, Antero accelerates integration gains, and Golden Pass ships its first LNG cargo.

Global gas, LNG, Haynesville and Permian outlooks reveal key trends in production, pricing and infrastructure expansion
Business Automation
ByIan Elchitz

This is the fifth installment in our series of blog articles dealing with source-to-pay and upstream oil and gas. Read the previous blog here.   For a lot of supply chain leaders in upstream oil and gas, the contract still feels like the...

Enverus Press Release - Class VI wave expected to hit US
Energy Transition
ByBrynna Foley, Enverus Intelligence® Research

Rising solar PPA prices Shift Energy Economics Solar PPA prices climb as developers proceed with projects; Enverus details impacts on solar, wind, and storage markets.

Enverus Press Release - Welcome to EVOLVE 2025: Where visionaries converge to shape the future of energy
Energy Analytics Geoscience Analytics
ByEnverus

People have been calling the top of the Permian for years. And yet, they keep having to walk it back.  Our latest Permian inventory analysis from the Enverus Intelligence® Research (EIR) team shows why the basin continues to defy those...

Carbon storage in question: Illinois regulation could threaten key CCUS projects
Power and Renewables
ByMorgan Kwan

The S&P Global Commodities conference in Las Vegas brought together investors, developers, utilities, and hyperscalers at an inflection point for the power sector. Four themes dominated the conversation. Each one is directionally right. Each one is also commercially incomplete. Here’s...

Let’s get started!

We’ll follow up right away to show you a quick product tour.

Let’s get started!

We’ll follow up right away to show you a quick product tour.

Sign up for our Blog

Ready to Subscribe?

Ready to Get Started?

Ready to Subscribe?

Sign Up

Power Your Insights