Here is a table with the actual numbers for 2003 to 2013:

http://www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/epm_table_grapher.cfm?t=epmt_1_1

Click on the "Graph" at the top right for an interesting look at the data.
Then on the box on the top right, "View a pre-generated report" see "1.1.A
Net Generation by Other Renewables: Total - All Sectors." "Others" are
mostly wind (the brown line). It varies a great deal by season. Solar (the
green line) barely registers at the bottom.

You can move the cursor on the colored lines in the graph to see what the
lines represent and what the underlying numbers are; i.e. "Wind, Oct 2011,
10,525 thousand megawatthours."

You gotta love the EIA.

Getting back to the table --

Renewables excluding hydro but including wind, geothermal, PV and so on are
glommed together in one category: "Renewable Sources Excluding
Hydroelectric."

You can see the dramatic decline in coal generation, and the rise of
natural gas. Coal has fallen by 387,739 (thousand megawatt hours), while
gas has risen 463,757. Overall generation has increased only a little, by
175,024.

Nuclear and hydroelectricity remain stable, as you would expect, since
there are no new nukes or dams. Renewables go from 79,487 to 253,328,
increasing by a factor of 3. That is impressive but it is still only 1/6th
of coal and only 1/16 of the total (6%).

The total for 2013 is 4,058,209.

I do not think the coal companies are quaking in their boots, worried about
competition from PV. They fear natural gas and wind.

"Petroleum liquids" are approaching zero. They are only used in Hawaii, I
believe. It makes no sense to burn oil to generate electricity.

- Jed

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