Follow The Flow
Follow The Flow
graphiti
Fossil fuels continue to satisfy nearly all of the United States’ energy Nearly half of the nation’s primary fuel supply is used to generate Most heat loss occurs during electricity generation,
demands. The potential for renewables to replace those fuels is still electricity. The rest is used to power vehicles and heat buildings, and but a lot is also lost in internal-combustion engines.
mostly unrealized. as feedstocks for the chemical industry. Thermoelectric devices could eventually be used to
convert some of that waste heat into electricity.
84.8% fossil fuels 28.6% transport
39.2% 13.8%
Petroleum Waste heat from internal-
combustion engines
28.5% 44.6% waste heat
Primary fuels
I
electrical energy
Natural gas
f you tried to get an all-embracing Industrial waste heat
view of energy use in the United 31.4% industrial
Commercial and residential
States, it wouldn’t take long for your
eyes to go blurry. The Energy Informa- 20.9%
tion Administration and other sources Primary fuels Feedstocks
22.4%
release reams of data almost constantly. Coal
That’s good if you want to look at minute Steam generation, facil-
3.4% Electricity
detail, but not so good if you want the ity heating and cooling,
7.2% Allocated waste heat from ventilation, lighting, and
big picture. electricity generation* other uses
Based on a version originally cre-
55.5% utilized
ated by researcher David Bassett for the
Woodrow Wilson Center, this energy 8.3% Nuclear 41.6% Used directly
flow map reveals the energy sources we as fuel for vehicles,
feedstocks for indus-
draw from, the ways we use that energy,
trial products, and heat
and the ways we waste it. Two elements 17.8% commercial
sources for residen-
3.6% Combined loss from
are perhaps most striking: at bottom 6.7% renewables electricity generation
tial and commercial
left, the relatively paltry contribution of 4.5% buildings