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U.S. Energy Information Administration
Industry: Energy
Number of terms: 18450
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Power or power-producing capacity, intended to be available at all times during the period covered by a guaranteed commitment to deliver, even under adverse conditions.
Industry:Energy
A liquid petroleum product less volatile than gasoline, used as an energy source. Fuel oil includes distillate fuel oil (No. 1, No. 2, and No. 4), and residual fuel oil (No. 5 and No.6).
Industry:Energy
An equity (not custody) transaction commonly associated with a transfer of ownership of crude oil associated with the physical removal of the crudeoil from a property for the first time (also referred to as a leasesale). A first purchase normally occurs at the time and place of ownership transfer where the crude oil volume sold is measured and recorded on a run ticket or other similar physical evidence of purchase.The volume purchased and the cost of such transaction shall not be measured farther from the well head than the point at which the value for landowner royalties is established, if there was a separate landowner.
Industry:Energy
An agreement between a company and a fuel provider which stipulates that the company agrees to purchase its fuel from the fuel provider. If the company has acredit card for use at a fuel provider's locations, but is not bound by an additional agreement to purchase fuel from that provider, the credit card agreement alone is not considered a fuel purchase agreement.
Industry:Energy
The price for domestic crude oil reported by the company that owns the crude oil the first time it is removed from the lease boundary.
Industry:Energy
The ratio of fixed carbon to volatile matter in coal.
Industry:Energy
The U.S. Government's fiscal year runs from October 1 through September 30. The fiscal year is designated by the calendar year in which it ends; e.g., fiscal year 2002 begins on October 1, 2001 and ends on September 30, 2002
Industry:Energy
The short-term capability of a manufacturing establishment to have used substitute energy sources in place of those actually consumed. Capability to use substitute energy sources means that the establishment's combustors (forexample, boilers, furnaces, ovens, and blast furnaces) had the machinery or equipment either in place or available for installation so that substitutions could actually have been introduced within 30 days without extensive modifications. Fuel-switching capability does not depend onthe relative prices of energy sources; it depends only on the characteristics of the equipment and certain legal constraints.
Industry:Energy
Material that can be caused to undergo atomic fission when bombarded by neutrons. The most important fissionable materials are uranium-235, plutonium-239, and uranium-233.
Industry:Energy
Wood and wood products, possibly including scrubs and branches, etc, bought or gathered, and used by direct combustion.
Industry:Energy