Announcing GridTracker
A new way to track interconnection projects, the documents that shape them, and the people behind them.
For the past two years, interconnection.fyi has provided interconnection queue data to some of the largest energy companies, research institutions, and manufacturers in the country. In that time, we’ve heard the same request over and over: “I want to go deeper than just seeing project stats. Can you help us understand what’s actually happening with these projects?”
The queue data tells you a project exists. But it doesn’t tell you who’s actually making decisions on it, what permits have been filed, or what FERC, state, or county proceedings might affect its timeline. That context lives across hundreds of scattered sources, and tracking it manually doesn’t scale.
So we built something to solve that.
Introducing GridTracker
GridTracker gives you real-time visibility into every generation project in every transmission interconnection queue across the continental US and Canada. But more importantly, it connects each project to the broader context that determines whether it will actually get built.
See the documents that matter
Immediately pull up relevant permits, press releases, FERC filings, and state PUC/PSC dockets in one click. No more hunting across multiple databases, and no more wrestling clunky government websites with incomplete and cumbersome search portals.
Find the actual decision-makers
This isn't a "who works at Company X" list from LinkedIn. We track who's attending relevant meetings and signing the paperwork. These are the people who are actually moving the projects forward.
Build precise watchlists and get notified
Define exactly the segments you care about. For example: "solar projects in ERCOT and SPP with planned CODs between May and October 2027, connecting at 69kV." (Side note: There are currently 13 projects matching those criteria, totaling 1.2 GW. The largest is Double A Solar in Goliad County, TX, owned by Birch Creek). You can track segments like this and get notified whenever something changes or a new project matches.
GridTracker is built on interconnection.fyi's real-time dataset, the same data trusted by organizations like Lawrence Berkeley National Lab for their Queued Up report. We've layered on a deeply curated collection of additional sources to give you the full picture.
Want to see it?
Visit the GridTracker homepage for more details, or schedule a demo to explore whether a subscription makes sense for your team.
We have some significant updates coming to GridTracker in the next few months. And keep an eye out for our retrospective report on what happened in the queues in 2025!





