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U.S. Energy Information Administration
Industry: Energy
Number of terms: 18450
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
The amount of money or consideration-in-kind for which a service is bought, sold, or offered for sale.
Industry:Energy
The maximum amount of electrical current that a transmission line or electrical facility can conduct over a specified time period before it sustains permanent damage by overheating or before it sags to the point that it violates public safety requirements.
Industry:Energy
One of the 345 weather divisions designated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) encompassing the 48 contiguous states. These divisions usually follow county borders to encompass counties with similar weather conditions.The NOAA division does not follow county borders when weather conditions vary considerably within a county; such is likely to happen when the county borders the ocean or contains high mountains. A state contains an average of seven NOAA divisions; a NOAA division contains an average of nine counties.
Industry:Energy
All coal milled and, when necessary, washed and sorted.
Industry:Energy
A machine used for drilling wells that employs a rotating tube attached to a bit for boring holes through rock.
Industry:Energy
This designates the resistance of a material to heat conduction. The greater the R-value the larger the number.
Industry:Energy
Power and energy lost by an electric system when not operating under demand.
Industry:Energy
Energy in the form that it is first accounted for in a statistical energy balance, before any transformation to secondary or tertiary forms of energy. For example, coal can be converted to synthetic gas, which can be converted to electricity; in this example, coal is primary energy, synthetic gas is secondary energy, and electricity is tertiary energy. See Primary energy production and Primary energy consumption.
Industry:Energy
A sieving screen with round holes, the dimensions of which are of specific sizes to allow certain sizes of coal to pass through while retaining other sizes.
Industry:Energy
Storage of heat or heat sinks (coldness) for later heating or cooling. Examples are the storage of solar energy for night heating; the storage of summer heat for winter use; the storage of winter ice for space cooling in the summer; and the storage of electrically-generated heat or coolness when electricity is less expensive, to be released in order to avoid using electricity when the rates are higher. There are four basic types of thermal storage systems: ice storage; water storage; storage in rock, soil or other types of solid thermal mass; and storage in other materials, such as glycol (antifreeze).
Industry:Energy