WASHINGTON, D.C. --
According to the latest issue of the U.S. Energy Information
Administration's (EIA) "Electric Power Monthly," with preliminary data
through to June 30, 2013, renewable energy sources (i.e., biomass,
geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind) provided 14.20 percent of the
nation's net electric power generation during the first half of the
year. For the same period in 2012, renewables accounted for 13.57
percent of net electrical generation.
Moreover, non-hydro renewables have more than tripled
their output during the past decade. They now account for almost the
same share of electrical generation (6.71 percent) as does conventional
hydropower (7.49 percent). Ten years ago (i.e., calendar year 2003),
non-hydro renewables provided only 2.05 percent of net U.S. electrical
generation.
Comparing the first six months of 2013 to the same period in 2012, solar thermal & PV combined have grown 94.4 percent (these additions understate actual solar capacity gains.
Unlike other energy sources, significant levels of solar capacity exist
in smaller, non-utility-scale applications - e.g., rooftop solar
photovoltaics). Wind increased 20.1 percent and geothermal grew by 1.0
percent, while biomass declined by 0.5 percent while hydropower dropped
by 2.6 percent. Among the non-hydro renewabes, wind is in the lead,
accounting for 4.67 percent of net electrical generation, followed by
biomass (1.42 percent), geothermal (0.43 percent), and solar (0.19
percent).
The balance of the nation's electrical generation mix for
the first half of 2013 consisted of coal (39.00 percent - up by 10.3
percent), natural gas and other gas (26.46 percent - down by 13.6
percent), nuclear power (19.48 percent - up by 0.2 percent), and
petroleum liquids + coke (0.66 percent - up by 15.6 percent). The
balance (0.21 percent) was from other sources and pumped hydro storage.
Every year for the past decade, non-hydro renewables have
increased both their net electrical output as well as their percentage
share of the nation's electricity mix. Moreover, the annual rate of
growth for solar and wind continues in the double digits, setting new
records each year.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/08/renewable-energy-tops-14-of-us-electrical-generation-during-first-half-of-2013
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