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Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004)

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Energy intensity data and documentation published by the U.S. DOE's office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). Energy intensity is defined as: amount of energy used in producing a given level of output or activity; expressed as energy per unit of output. This is the energy intensity of the the industrial sector, which is an end-use that consists of all facilities and equipment used for producing, processing, or assembling goods. It is comprised of: manufacturing, agriculture, forestry, fisheries, mining and construction. Data is available for the period 1949 - 2004.

Source

industrialindicators.xls

Energy intensity data and documentation published by the U.S. DOE's office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE).
Not Available

Citation Formats

TY - DATA AB - Energy intensity data and documentation published by the U.S. DOE's office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). Energy intensity is defined as: amount of energy used in producing a given level of output or activity; expressed as energy per unit of output. This is the energy intensity of the the industrial sector, which is an end-use that consists of all facilities and equipment used for producing, processing, or assembling goods. It is comprised of: manufacturing, agriculture, forestry, fisheries, mining and construction. Data is available for the period 1949 - 2004. AU - Hallett, KC A2 - (EERE), Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy DB - Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI) DP - Open EI | National Renewable Energy Laboratory DO - KW - Energy Consumption KW - energy intensity KW - fossil fuels KW - industrial sector KW - renewable energy LA - English DA - 2014/11/25 PY - 2014 PB - National Renewable Energy Laboratory T1 - Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004) UR - https://data.openei.org/submissions/254 ER -
Export Citation to RIS
Hallett, KC, and Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE). Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004). National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 25 November, 2014, Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). https://data.openei.org/submissions/254.
Hallett, K., & (EERE), O. (2014). Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004). [Data set]. Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). National Renewable Energy Laboratory. https://data.openei.org/submissions/254
Hallett, KC and Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE). Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004). National Renewable Energy Laboratory, November, 25, 2014. Distributed by Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). https://data.openei.org/submissions/254
@misc{OEDI_Dataset_254, title = {Energy Intensity Indicators in the U.S.: Industrial Sector (1949 - 2004)}, author = {Hallett, KC and (EERE), Office of Energy Efficiency \& Renewable Energy}, abstractNote = {Energy intensity data and documentation published by the U.S. DOE's office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). Energy intensity is defined as: amount of energy used in producing a given level of output or activity; expressed as energy per unit of output. This is the energy intensity of the the industrial sector, which is an end-use that consists of all facilities and equipment used for producing, processing, or assembling goods. It is comprised of: manufacturing, agriculture, forestry, fisheries, mining and construction. Data is available for the period 1949 - 2004.}, url = {https://data.openei.org/submissions/254}, year = {2014}, howpublished = {Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI), National Renewable Energy Laboratory, https://data.openei.org/submissions/254}, note = {Accessed: 2025-05-17} }

Details

Data from Nov 25, 2014

Last updated Nov 25, 2014

Submitted Nov 25, 2014

Organization

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Contact

KC Hallett

katie.brodersen@nrel.gov

Authors

KC Hallett

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE)

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