Domestic production and consumption of renewable energy (biofuels, biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind) reached an all-time high in 2021, according to a SUN DAY Campaign analysis of new data released by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
The latest issue of EIA’s “Monthly Energy Review” report (with data through Dec. 31, 2021) reveals that renewable sources accounted for more than one-eighth (12.61 percent) of the U.S. energy produced and 12.49 percent of the energy consumed for electricity, transportation, heating, and other uses. Renewable energy production during 2021 was 12.317 quadrillion Btu (quads) – 5.39 percent more than in 2020 and 5.89 percent more than in 2019.
A sharp drop in hydropower (down 8.79 percent) was more than offset by growth in all non-hydro renewables: solar energy (up 23.84 percent), wind (up 12.38 percent), biofuels (up 7.52 percent), geothermal (up 1.48 percent), and biomass (up 1.00 percent).
Wind is now the largest single renewable energy source, accounting for 27.05 percent of total U.S. renewable energy output, followed by biomass (21.41 percent), biofuels (19.15 percent), hydropower (18.54 percent), solar (12.19 percent), and geothermal (1.67 percent).
By comparison, production by the nation’s nuclear power plants in 2021 dropped by 1.48 percent and 3.82 percent compared to 2020 and 2019 levels. As a consequence, energy provided by renewable sources in 2021 exceeded nuclear generation by more than 50 percent (12.317 quads vs. 8.129 quads).
Renewables energy production last year also surpassed that of coal by 6.54 percent (12.317 quads vs. 11.561 quads). While energy produced from coal increased over its 2019 level (10.703 quads), it was still less than any prior year going back to the early 1960s.
However, domestic energy production from all fossil fuel sources combined (oil and natural gas as well as coal) increased by 2.03 percent and accounted for 79.08 percent of the total. That, in turn, contributed to a 6.12 percent increase in carbon dioxide (C02) emissions attributable to U.S. energy consumption.
“The continued expansion of renewable energy’s share of U.S. energy production and consumption is encouraging,” notes the SUN DAY Campaign’s Executive Director Ken Bossong. “However, EIA’s latest data provide a clear warning that the pace of that growth must accelerate rapidly if we are to avoid the worst consequences of climate change.”
SOURCES: The U.S. Energy Information Administration released its latest “Monthly Energy Review” on March 29, 2022. The data cited in this release can be found at, or extrapolated from, the following tables:
Table 1.1 Primary Energy Overview
Table 1.2 Primary Energy Production by Source
Table 1.3 Primary Energy Consumption by Source
Table 10.1 Renewable Energy Production and Consumption by Source
Table 11.1 Carbon Dioxide Emissions From Energy Consumption by Source
Table 11.7 Carbon Dioxide Emissions From Biomass Energy Consumption