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U.S. Electricity Use is Declining and Efficiency May be a Significant Factor

February 25, 2014 by Jeff Shepard

U.S. electricity sales peaked in 2007 and have been declining modestly since then, observed Steven Nadel, Executive Director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) in a blog posting. Sales in 2012 were 1.9% lower than 2007 sales, and sales in the first ten months of 2013 are below the same period in 2012. While the economic recession is an obvious explanation for the decline in sales in 2008 and 2009, it is much less clear why sales have continued to decline since then, even as the economy began to recover. While some observers have attributed this stalled growth to the ongoing effects of the "Great Recession," other observers suggest other factors may have played a role, such as erosion of manufacturing, more efficient buildings, lighting and appliances and increased use of on-site generation.

ACEEE has just completed an analysis on electricity-use trends since 1993 and looked at changes in sales over the period of 2007-2012 in particular. The study found that no single factor can explain the change in electricity use between 1993 and 2012. The factors that appear most significant were energy efficiency programs and policies, warmer weather, changes in gross domestic product (GDP), changes in electricity prices, and long-term trends.

Over the more recent period of 2007-2012, savings resulting from energy efficiency programs and policies, and from warmer winter weather, appear to be the most important contributors to declining electricity use in the residential and commercial sectors. This finding is consistent with the ramp-up of energy efficiency savings achieved from utility-sector energy efficiency programs, and from appliance and equipment efficiency standards that have taken effect since 2007.

The other possible factors considered, such as GDP and electricity prices, did not change very much over the last six years and therefore do not appear to have had a significant effect on the recent decline in electricity use. The factors contributing to the decline in electricity use in the industrial sector are less clear but may include energy efficiency programs and policies as well.

Further analysis and more data are needed to better understand the relative contribution of energy efficiency to declining electricity sales. In particular, there is a need to further examine what is occurring in the industrial sector. That analysis may need to wait for better industrial data to emerge, and for underlying trends in this sector to further manifest themselves as the sector recovers from the “Great Recession.”

The factors influencing electricity use are complex and difficult to boil down to a few key explanatory factors. For a variety of reasons explained in the full paper, these results should be considered indicative, not definitive. It will be useful to update the analysis in a few years to see if the recent decline in electricity use, and the contribution of energy efficiency to this decline, continue. For example, if the recent cold winter weather continues, electricity for heating could be higher in 2014. Even so, this analysis suggests that energy efficiency has become an important factor in the level of U.S. electricity consumption, Nadel concluded.