Tuesday, April 16, 2013

82% of New US Electrical Capacity is Renewable Energy

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04/11/2013 03:54 PM      ShareThis
82% of New US Electrical Capacity is Renewable Energy

SustainableBusiness.com News


During the first quarter of 2013, renewable energy accounted for 82% of new
electrical generating capacity in the US, and 100% in March. 

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) says that 1546 megawatts
(MW) of renewables came online, along with 340 MW of natural gas. No new
coal, oil or nuclear capacity has been added this year so far. 

Six wind farms came online totaling 958 MW, 38 solar farms at 537 MM and 28
biomass plants added 46 MW. Four small hydro plants added 5.4 MW.

The solar added is more than double that of the first quarter last year.



Including hydro, renewable energy now accounts for almost 16% of US
electrical generating capacity: hydro - 8.53%; wind - 5.18%; biomass -
1.30%;  solar - 0.44%; and geothermal - 0.32%. This is more than nuclear
(9.15%) and oil (3.54%) combined. 

Note that generating "capacity" isn't the same as actual generation. In
terms of net electrical generation, renewables supply a bit more than 13%,
according to the US Energy Information Administration. 

In 2012, renewables accounted for almost half of all new electrical
generating capacity - 46.22%.

"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," says
EIA. 

 

 

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