BRIEF NEWS UPDATE: Renewables Provide a Fifth of U.S. Electricity as Small-Scale Solar Grows 20%

Jay OwenGreentech

SUN DAY CAMPAIGN

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Brief News Update

EIA’s MID-YEAR “ELECTRIC POWER MONTHLY” REPORT:

YEAR TO DATE:

RENEWABLES EXCEED 20.1% OF U.S. ELECTRICITY,

NECK-AND-NECK WITH NUCLEAR,

CLOSING IN ON COAL

SOLAR REACHES 2.7% OF TOTAL AS

WIND RETAINS ITS LEAD OVER HYDROPOWER

For Release:  Tuesday – August 27, 2019

Contact:         Ken Bossong, 301-270-6477 x.6

Washington DC – Renewable energy sources (i.e., biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind) accounted for more than a fifth (20.1%) of net domestic electrical generation during the first six months of 2019, according to a SUN DAY Campaign analysis of just-released data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). A year earlier, renewables’ share was 19.9%.

 

The latest issue of EIA’s “Electric Power Monthly” (with data through June 30, 2019) reveals that solar and wind both showed continued growth.

 

Solar, including small-scale solar photovoltaic (PV) systems, increased by 10.5% compared to the first half of 2018 and accounted for 2.7% of the nation’s total net generation. Small-scale solar (e.g., distributed rooftop systems) – which increased by 19.9% – provided nearly a third (32.7%) of total solar electrical generation.

 

U.S. wind-generated electricity increased by 0.9% and topped that provided by hydropower by 0.4%. Wind’s share was 7.8% of total electrical output vs. 7.7% from hydropower.

 

Combined, wind and solar accounted for 10.5% of U.S. electrical generation through the end of June. In addition, biomass provided 1.5% and geothermal contributed a bit more than 0.4% (reflecting 2.2% growth).

 

Moreover, during the six-month period, electricity from renewable energy sources ran neck-and-neck with that from nuclear power — 399,585 vs. 400,005 thousand megawatt-hours or 20.11% vs. 20.14% of total domestic electrical output.

 

In addition, during the first half of 2019, renewables further closed the gap with coal. A year ago, renewables provided 74.6% as much electricity as coal. However, growth in renewable electrical output coupled with a 13.2% drop in that of coal has resulted in renewables generating 85.0% as much electricity as coal during the first six months of 2019.