Wow!
Between coal and tar sands we can really cook the planet!
Coal
Is Regaining A Big Lead As America’s Top Source Of Electricity
25
May, 2013
Back
in 2011 and 2012, natural gas was rapidly rising as a source of
electricity in the U.S., displacing coal. In April 2012, the
two sources were tied, each supply 32% of the America’s energy.
But
environmentalists will be disappointed to hear that coal is now back
to providing 40% of the nation’s electricity output, more than all
other power sources.
According
to the EIA, the U.S. tapped 131,000 megawatt hours worth of coal in
March, compared with just 84,000 for natgas.
Here’s
the chart:
The
reason: natural gas prices have now climbed back to well above $4,
after falling to as low as $2 a year ago. EIA:
Heading
into the 2013 spring shoulder season (between winter and summer),
when demand for electricity typically falls, higher prices for
natural gas reduced the fuel’s share of total generation below the
record levels of last April.
The
good news is that coal still comprises far fewer megawatt hours than
it ever has — since 2009 annual coal generation has fallen well
below its historical 2 million megawatt hour norm.
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