Electricity
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Electric Power Annual 2010 Data Tables
With Data for 2010 | Release Date: November 09, 2011 | Next Release Date: November 2012
Table 1.2. Existing Capacity by Energy Source, 2010 (Megawatts) | ||||
Energy Source | Number of Generators |
Generator Nameplate Capacity |
Net Summer Capacity |
Net Winter Capacity |
---|---|---|---|---|
Coal[1] | 1,396 | 342,296 | 316,800 | 319,186 |
Petroleum[2] | 3,779 | 62,504 | 55,647 | 59,577 |
Natural Gas[3] | 5,529 | 467,214 | 407,028 | 438,727 |
Other Gases[4] | 106 | 3,130 | 2,700 | 2,691 |
Nuclear | 104 | 106,731 | 101,167 | 102,984 |
Hydroelectric Conventional[5] | 4,020 | 78,204 | 78,825 | 78,468 |
Wind | 689 | 39,516 | 39,135 | 39,185 |
Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic | 181 | 987 | 941 | 846 |
Wood and Wood Derived Fuels[6] | 346 | 7,949 | 7,037 | 7,094 |
Geothermal | 225 | 3,498 | 2,405 | 2,590 |
Other Biomass[7] | 1,574 | 5,043 | 4,369 | 4,440 |
Pumped Storage | 151 | 20,538 | 22,199 | 22,064 |
Other[8] | 51 | 1,027 | 884 | 896 |
Total | 18,151 | 1,138,638 | 1,039,137 | 1,078,748 |
[1] Anthracite, bituminous coal, subbituminous coal, lignite, and waste 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] Includes a small number of generators for which waste heat is the primary energy source. [4] Blast furnace gas, propane gas, and other manufactured and waste gases derived from fossil fuels. [5] The net summer capacity and/or the net winter capacity may exceed nameplate capacity due to upgrades to and overload capability of hydroelectric generators. [6] 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. [7] 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). [8] Batteries, chemicals, hydrogen, pitch, purchased steam, sulfur, tire-derived fuels and miscellaneous technologies. Notes: • 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. • Totals may not equal sum of components because of independent rounding. • In some reporting of capacity data, such as for wind, solar and wave energy sites, the capacity for multiple generators is reported in a single generator record and is presented as a single generator in the count of number of generators. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-860, "Annual Electric Generator Report." |