Energy industry news - solar, wind, hydroelectric, natural gas, petroleum.
| December 20, 2021 | Energy | Alternative
| December 17, 2021 | Energy | Alternative | Logistics
| December 17, 2021 | Energy
The U.S. electric power sector’s cooling water withdrawals fell 10.5% from 53.1 trillion gallons in 2019 to 47.5 trillion gallons in 2020, continuing the downward trend in withdrawals. The decline has been driven by the increased use of renewable and natural gas-fired generation in place of coal-fired generation, as well as less use of once-through cooling technologies.
| December 17, 2021 | Energy
| December 17, 2021 | Energy | Alternative
| December 17, 2021 | Energy
| December 16, 2021 | Energy
| December 16, 2021 | Energy | International Trade
| December 16, 2021 | Energy | Alternative | Maritime | Technology
| December 16, 2021 | Energy | Alternative
| December 15, 2021 | Energy
| December 15, 2021 | Energy | Conventional
| December 15, 2021 | Energy | Conventional | By The Numbers
Although coal-fired power plants have no mandatory retirement age, power plant owners and operators have reported to EIA that they plan to retire 28%, or 59 gigawatts (GW), of the coal-fired capacity currently operating in the United States by 2035.
| December 15, 2021 | Energy | Conventional | By The Numbers
Onshore gas flaring in the US nosedived in the third quarter of 2021, falling to its lowest level since at least 2012*, a Rystad Energy analysis shows.
| December 15, 2021 | Energy | Conventional | By The Numbers
Oil production from non-mining processes in the Canadian province of Alberta hit an all-time high in October 2021, averaging 2.27 million barrels per day (bpd), marginally topping the previous record of 2.25 million bpd set in December 2019, a Rystad Energy report shows.
| December 14, 2021 | Energy | Alternative
| December 14, 2021 | Energy | Conventional
In the International Energy Outlook 2021 (IEO2021), Issues in Focus: Changes in Composition of Economic Growth in China, we compared the IEO2021 Reference case with the Higher China Wages case—a case in which we assumed that a smaller working-age population will result in a faster increase in wages through 2050.
| December 14, 2021 | Energy | Alternative
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