Energy Information Administration news and technical articles from Power Engineering International. Search Energy Information Administration latest and archived news and articles
Nov. 6, 2002 -- The Energy Information Administration (EIA) has completed its annual Energy Review for the year 2001. Included in the review is U.S. energy history from 1949
reflecting a continuing contraction in the manufacturing sector, but residential sales jumped 11%. The Energy Information Administration reported total power sales in March rose 3% to 268 billion kw-hr, from the same period in 2000. Residential
continued to improve, enhancing the role of nuclear power as an electric energy source. According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), 32 countries presently use nuclear power to generate electricity. In 1996, nuclear power accounted
11 percent to nearly 98,000 peak kilowatts in 2001, according to information released recently by the Energy Information Administration in the report, "Renewable Energy Annual 2001." An 80-percent surge in domestic shipments to a record
percent over the next two decades, according to "International Energy Outlook 2001", released today by the Energy Information Administration (EIA). One-half of the projected growth is expected to occur in the developing nations of Asia (including
Oct. 29, 2002 -- The Energy Information Administration (EIA) has changed how it estimates and presents data on the fuels used to produce electricity. The purpose of these changes
percent higher than the 2000 record of 753.9 net billion kWh, according to information released by the Energy Information Administration . This is the third consecutive annual record for nuclear generation. In 2001, utilization of U.S
s largest deposits of shale gas , an estimated 5.3 trillion cubic metres, which according to the US Energy Information Administration is enough to supply the country’s energy needs for the next 300 years. Oilprice.com reports that Poland
Figures just released by the US Energy Information Administration have revealed that renewable energy surpassed nuclear energy in the US for the first time in 2011. The EIA's figures cover the
production continues a steady descent over the next two decades, according to new government data. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) have released an early version of its annual energy outlook, which predicted a slowdown in growth