During the first four months of 2022, electrical generation by renewable energy sources accounted for over 25% of the nation’s electricity. In April alone, renewables accounted for 29.3% — an all-time high.
And for the first time ever, the combination of just wind and solar produce more electricity in April than the nation’s nuclear power plants — 17.96% more.
This is according to a SUN DAY Campaign analysis of data in EIA’s “Electric Power Monthly” report. The report also reveals that during the first third of this year, solar (including residential) expanded by 28.93%, while wind increased by 24.25%. Combined, solar and wind grew by 25.46% and accounted for more than one-sixth (16.67%) of U.S. electrical generation (wind: 12.24%, solar: 4.43%).
Hydropower also increased by 9.99% during the first four months of 2022. However, wind alone provided 70.89% more electricity than did hydropower. Together with contributions from geothermal and biomass, the mix of renewable energy sources expanded by 18.49% and provided 25.52% of the nation’s electricity during the first four months of 2022.
For the first third of the year, renewables outpaced coal and nuclear power by 26.13% and 37.80% respectively. In fact, electrical generation by coal declined by 3.94% compared to the same period in 2021 while nuclear dropped by 1.80%.
“Notwithstanding headwinds such as the COVID pandemic, grid access problems, and disruptions in global supply chains, solar and wind remain on a roll,” noted the SUN DAY Campaign’s executive director Ken Bossong. “Moreover, by surpassing nuclear power by ever greater margins, they illustrate the foolishness of trying to revive the soon-to-retire Diablo Canyon nuclear plant in California and the just-retired Palisades reactor in Michigan rather than focusing on accelerating renewables’ growth.”
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James Thompson says
Great news and great article. One thing. It’s never good to include biomass as a renewable energy. While technically “renewable,” its environmental impacts make it a very harmful way to generate energy.
Chris Homa says
The report you referenced shows renewables at 15% not 30% it appears you doubled counted by adding the individual renewables to the renewables total.
Ken E. Bossong says
EIA’s April 2022 data in thousand megawatt hours is:
Hydropower: 20,194
Non-Hydro Renewables: 65,075
Small-Scale Solar: 5,518
Total Renewables: 90,787
Total Utility-Scale Energy: 304,349
+ Small-Scale Solar: 5,518
Total Energy: 309,867
RE’s share: 29.30%