Energy in Obama’s First Term
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Domestic energy production from renewables grew by 24% with wind and solar more than doubling in output. During the same period, nuclear power output declined by nearly 5% and domestic coal production dropped by 13%. Total energy use declined by 4%, petroleum consumption decreased by 7%, CO2 emissions dropped by 9%, and imports of crude oil and petroleum where can i buy cheap generic ambien products fell by 17%.
In Obama’s first term, total domestic energy production from all sources increased by 8%. Domestic natural gas and crude oil production grew by 19% and 29% respectively. Renewable energy sources (electric and thermal) accounted for 11% of domestic energy production in 2012 compared to 10% in 2008, providing 10% more energy than nuclear power.
During the first four years of the Obama Administration, hydropower production grew by 7%, geothermal by 18%, biofuels by 41%, solar by 138%, and wind by 149%. Only biomass dipped, and by less than a percent.
Hydropower accounted for 30% of domestic energy production from renewable sources in 2012, followed by biomass (28%), biofuels (22%), wind (15%), geothermal (3%), and solar (2%). EIA data does not account for distributed, non-grid connected applications, somewhat understating solar capacity.