Random Walk

Random Walk

Share this post

Random Walk
Random Walk
A pleasant surprise about energy consumption

A pleasant surprise about energy consumption

Daily Data: Peak energy is a lot farther away than you think

Moses Sternstein's avatar
Moses Sternstein
Jul 01, 2024
∙ Paid
3

Share this post

Random Walk
Random Walk
A pleasant surprise about energy consumption
2
Share
  • energy peaked when you’d least expect it

  • efficiency, offshoring or something else?

  • data centers already showing up in the power grid

  • but if got efficient once, why not twice?


👉👉👉Reminder to sign up for the Weekly Recap only, if daily emails is too much. Find me on twitter, for more fun. 

A pleasant surprise about energy consumption

So Random Walk learned something new about energy consumption that seems too crazy to believe.

Before you look at the answer, try to guess when US energy consumption peaked:

Loading...

Did you guess?

Behold, the answer!

According to the EIA, US energy consumption peaked in 2007, with 99 quadrillion British thermal units consumed:

EIA

Current energy consumption is about the same as it was back in the late 90s.

That’s incredible.

To repeat, as a nation, we’re consuming about the same amount of energy as we did 25+ years ago (according to the EIA). I knew that growth and oil usage decoupled a while back, but I wasn’t expecting this.

Putting aside the additional ~30 million people we’ve added since then, if you think of all the electronics, and networked devices, and stuff, and second-homes, and all of that, it’s just a remarkable observation.

How is it possible that we’ve managed to reduce energy consumption by quite so much?

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Random Walk to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Moses Sternstein
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share