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Planned Nameplate Capacity Additions from New Generators, by Energy Source
                                         
Table 2.4.    xls   pdf    formats     
Table 2.4.  Planned Nameplate Capacity Additions from New Generators, by Energy Source, 2008 through 2012
(Megawatts)
Energy Source 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Coal[1] 1,131 6,082 4,996 4,514 6,624
Petroleum[2] 90 1,045 55 720 --
Natural Gas 9,780 12,334 8,911 6,919 10,156
Other Gases[3] -- -- -- -- --
Nuclear -- -- -- -- 1,270
Hydroelectric Conventional 18 6 6 204 2
Wind 9,821 3,661 1,045 90 --
Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic 23 127 315 1,050 880
Wood and Wood Derived Fuels[4] 32 60 68 14 114
Geothermal 138 30 87 128 --
Other Biomass[5] 173 129 1 122 2
Pumped Storage -- -- -- -- --
Other[6] 22 -- -- -- --
Total 21,226 23,475 15,484 13,762 19,049
  [1] Anthracite, bituminous coal, subbituminous coal, lignite, waste coal, and synthetic coal.
  [2] Distillate fuel oil (all diesel and No. 1, No. 2, and No. 4 fuel oils), residual fuel oil (No. 5 and No. 6 fuel oils and bunker C fuel oil), jet fuel, kerosene, petroleum coke (converted to liquid petroleum, see Technical Notes for conversion methodology), and waste oil.
  [3] Blast furnace gas, propane gas, and other manufactured and waste gases derived from fossil fuels.
  [4] Wood/wood waste solids (including paper pellets, railroad ties, utility poles, wood chips, bark, and wood waste solids), wood waste liquids (red liquor, sludge wood, spent sulfite liquor, and other wood-based liquids), and black liquor.
  [5] Biogenic municipal solid waste, landfill gas, sludge waste, agricultural byproducts, other biomass solids, other biomass liquids, and other biomass gases (including digester gases, methane, and other biomass gases).
  [6] Batteries, chemicals, hydrogen, pitch, purchased steam, sulfur, tire-derived fuels and miscellaneous technologies.
  Notes: Projected data are updated annually, so revision superscript is not used. Capacity by energy source is based on the capacity associated with the energy source reported as the most predominant (primary) one, where more than one energy source is associated with a generator.  These data reflect plans as of December 31, 2007. Totals may not equal sum of components because of independent rounding.
  Source: Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-860, "Annual Electric Generator Report."

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see also:
Electric Power Monthly
Electric Power Annual
annual electricity statistics back to 1949
projected electricity capacity to 2030
international electricity statistics