GEM neighorhood electric vehicle | EV World Is Now Powered By Plug-In Conversions Corporation
PREMIUM LOGIN
ADVERTISE ON EV WORLD
Reach tens of thousands of key EV industry drivers: from designers to investors and, of course, customers. CLICK TO LEARN MORE

Also check out EV WORLD MARKETSPACE.
 


14 Jul 2009 HEADLINE


Renewable Energy Now Accounts for 13% U.S. Power Generation



Source: SUN Day Campaign
Class: PRESS RELEASE

SYNOPSIS: Non-hydro renewables now a 4.24% of electric power output, higher than 2013 Senate energy bill target of 3%.

Washington DC – Electrical generation from non-hydro renewable energy sources (i.e., biomass, geothermal, solar, wind) continues its rapid growth according to the latest figures released by the Energy Information Administration in its "Electric Power Monthly" report.

For the 12-month period ending April 30, 2009, non-hydro renewables accounted for 3.18 percent of electrical generation; conventional hydropower accounted for an additional 6.29 percent; combined renewables accounted for 9.47 percent. By comparison, for the 12-month period ending April 30, 2008, the corresponding numbers were 2.69 percent, 5.66 percent, and 8.35 percent.

For the first four months of 2009, non-hydro renewables accounted for 3.67 percent and hydropower produced 7.00 percent; combined, all renewables accounted for 10.68 percent of U.S. electrical generation.

In terms of absolute output, non-hydro renewables during the first four months of 2009 produced 12.47 percent more electricity than they did for the same period in 2008. Similarly, hydropower during the first third of 2009 was 8.22 percent higher than for the first third of 2008.

Most dramatically, for the month of April 2009 alone, non-hydro renewables accounted for 4.24 percent of electrical output while conventional hydropower provided 8.73 percent; combined, renewable energy sources accounted for 12.96 percent of electrical generation.

“Month-after-month, the hard data refutes those who continue to falsely claim that renewable energy accounts for only a minute fraction of the nation’s electricity supply,” said Ken Bossong, Executive Director of the SUN DAY Campaign. “Moreover, non-hydro renewables are already well beyond the measly target set by pending energy legislation now before the U.S. Senate which calls for just 3% renewables by 2013.”

Other key findings of the report are that net generation in the United States dropped by 5.0 percent from April 2008 to April 2009. This was the ninth consecutive month that net generation was down compared to the same calendar month in the prior year.

Comparing April 2008 to April 2009, coal-fired generation fell by 20,551 thousand megawatt-hours, or 13.9 percent. Generation from natural gas-fired plants was down by 1.5 percent.

On the other hand, net generation from wind sources was 34.8 percent higher. Generation from conventional hydroelectric sources was the largest absolute increase in April 2009 as it was up by 3,918 thousand megawatt-hours, or 18.4 percent from April 2008.

Finally, nuclear power in April 2009 experienced a nearly 12 percent drop from the preceding month.

Editor's Note: EV World's consulting group -- EV World & Associates LLC -- is actively engaged in development of an innovative new hydrokinetic power generation system called HyPEG, which you can read about on the new HydroKinetic Lab web site.




Article Views: 1315



Reader Comments

A valid email address and confirmation is required before your comment can be posted. Comments not confirmed within 24 hours are automatically deleted.

First Name Last Name
Email Address:

[Please check your spelling. Do NOT use double quotes.
Use <P> to separate paragraphs.]

TYPE THE ABOVE CODE WORD INTO THE FORM FIELD


1 comments so far...

15-Jul-2009
67323
  

The article is overstating the drop in coal, natural gas, and nuclear output because it’s the economy that’s causing that issue. It’s abundantly obvious that you would not cut back on renewables output in a bad economy because the fuel is “free”. Sometimes I think the renewables crowd thinks the whole world can’t figure this stuff out.


Posted by: Ron Ronald


TOOLS

printer email RSS

Miles Kilometers  
MPG L/100km  
 

[More Metric Converters]


Sign Up for FREE Weekly Email