- The Southeast is becoming a hub for solar, electric vehicle, and battery manufacturing plants.
- Companies in five states, including Georgia and South Carolina, could need nearly 40,000 workers.
- Tax breaks in the Inflation Reduction Act are helping fuel the growth.
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Southeastern states like Georgia and the Carolinas are quickly becoming hot spots for climate jobs.
Companies in the region that make solar panels, electric vehicles, and battery storage are building factories that may require some 40,000 workers, according to data compiled by E2 between August 2022 and November 2023. That figure reflects planned projects in Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky.
“The US used to be relegated to buying solar panels and batteries made in China and other parts of Asia,” Bob Keefe, the executive director of E2, told Business Insider. “Now we are making them here, and we’re making them at scale.”
The manufacturing boom is largely driven by the Inflation Reduction Act, which Congress passed in August 2022. The law includes hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks for companies that make renewable-energy technology in the US to accelerate the green transition and reduce the country’s reliance on China.








