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Gas Energy

Per Capita Consumption Visualizations


Electricity in America

US Energy Power Sources

Gas Energy

Gas Power Production

Official State Seal

US Energy History

US Energy Consumption, 1850-2000


Vertical scale is quadrillion BTU's.
Energy estimates by US Department of Energy.


Freeloader Pico Solar Charger
United States Carbon Footprints

United States Natural Gas Energy Use Comparisons

The United States Gas Energy Sector List

Click-on State, Population Rank or Per Capita Carbon Output to toggle lists orders.
State Population Rank Per Capita Carbon Output Million Tons of Carbon
  Alaska  #48 #37   44.78 Million Tons of C02
  California  #1 #2   388.95 Million Tons of C02
  Florida  #4 #5   243.89 Million Tons of C02
  Louisiana  #22 #10   179.11 Million Tons of C02
  Maine  #40 #43   23.28 Million Tons of C02
  Massachusetts  #13 #25   87.01 Million Tons of C02
  Nevada  #35 #38   43.3 Million Tons of C02
  Rhode Island  #43 #49   11.35 Million Tons of C02
  Texas  #2 #1   670.22 Million Tons of C02
State Population Rank Per Capita Carbon Output Million Tons of C02
Click-on State, Population Rank or Per Capita Carbon Output to toggle lists orders.
Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with other fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills. It is an important fuel source, a major feedstock for fertilizers, and a potent greenhouse gas.

Before natural gas can be used as a fuel, it must undergo extensive processing to remove almost all materials other than methane. The by-products of that processing include ethane, propane, butanes, pentanes and higher molecular weight hydrocarbons, elemental sulfur, carbon dioxide, water vapor and sometimes helium and nitrogen.

Natural gas is often informally referred to as simply gas, especially when compared to other energy sources such as oil or coal.
 Show Data By:
  Data Series    
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 View
History
U.S.
5.46 7.33 6.39 6.25 7.96 3.71 1922-2009
Alabama
6.66 9.28 7.57 7.44 9.65   1967-2008
Alaska
3.42 4.75 5.79 5.63 7.39   1967-2008
Arizona
5.12 6.86 5.70 5.98 7.09   1967-2008
Arkansas
5.68 7.26 6.43 6.61 8.72   1967-2008
California
5.65 7.45 6.47 6.62 8.38   1967-2008
Colorado
5.21 7.43 6.12 4.57 6.94   1967-2008
Florida
            1967-1995
Illinois
            1967-1994
Indiana
6.30 9.11 6.01 5.78 7.58   1967-2008
Kansas
4.94 6.51 5.61 5.69 6.85   1967-2008
Kentucky
5.26 6.84 8.83 7.35 8.42   1967-2008
Louisiana
5.96 8.72 6.93 7.02 8.73   1967-2008
Maryland
6.25 7.43 NA NA NA   1967-2008
Michigan
3.85 5.30 NA NA 5.63   1967-2008
Mississippi
5.83 8.54 6.84 6.70 8.80   1967-2008
Missouri
            1967-1997
Montana
4.51 6.57 5.53 5.72 7.50   1967-2008
Nebraska
3.22 4.29 NA 4.86 6.22   1967-2008
Nevada
    -- NA NA   2006-2008
New Mexico
4.97 6.91 6.18 6.88 8.40   1967-2008
New York
6.98 7.78 7.13 8.85 8.94   1967-2008
North Dakota
5.73 8.40 6.52 6.67 8.55   1967-2008
Ohio
6.65 9.03 7.75 7.59 7.88   1967-2008
Oklahoma
5.52 7.21 6.32 6.24 7.56   1967-2008
Oregon
3.89 4.25 NA 5.27 5.33   1979-2008
Pennsylvania
NA NA NA NA NA   1967-2008
South Dakota
5.49 7.44 6.40 7.22 7.94   1979-2008
Tennessee
6.90 9.55 6.78 6.63 8.85   1967-2008
Texas
5.83 7.55 6.60 6.98 8.51   1967-2008
Utah
5.24 7.16 5.49 NA 6.15   1967-2008
Virginia
            1967-1995
West Virginia
NA --         1967-2005
Wyoming
4.96 6.86 5.85 4.65 6.86   1967-2008