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The image shows a line graph titled "U.S. Energy Consumption by Fuel (1980-2030)" with data from 1980 to 2007 as history and projected data from 2010 to 2030. The graph displays energy consumption in quadrillion units on the y-axis and time in years on the x-axis. Petrol and Oil consumption starts at approximately 35 quadrillion units in 1980, reaching nearly 45 quadrillion units in 2007 and projected to reach over 50 quadrillion units by 2030. Coal consumption begins at just over 15 quadrillion units, increasing to almost 25 quadrillion units in 2007 and projected at 30 quadrillion units in 2030. Natural Gas consumption starts at around 15 quadrillion units, with a steady increase to 25 quadrillion units in 2007 and projected to continue to about 30 quadrillion units in 2030. Nuclear, Solar/Wind, and Hydropower have significantly lower consumption levels, all starting below 5 quadrillion units in 1980. Nuclear energy shows a gradual increase to approximately 8 quadrillion units by 2007, with a projection of nearly 10 quadrillion units by 2030. Solar/Wind energy sees the most significant projected increase, starting at nearly 0 quadrillion units in 1980, with a slight increase to almost 3 quadrillion units in 2007 and an anticipated surge to 10 quadrillion units by 2030. Hydropower consumption remains relatively stable, starting at just over 2 quadrillion units, with little change by 2007 and a small projected increase to about 4 quadrillion units by 2030.
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The diagram illustrates U.S. energy consumption from 1980 to 2008, along with predicted figures through 2030, measured in quadrillion units. Additionally, energy sources are classified into six types: petrol and oil, coal, natural gas, nuclear, solar/wind, and hydropower.
Overall, fossil fuels such as petrol and oil have consistently dominated throughout the period, while coal and natural gas have contributed substantially. In contrast, renewable sources, such as solar/wind and hydropower, alongside nuclear, have accounted for the smallest proportion of total energy consumption over time.
According to the graph, from 1980 to 2008, there was a gradual rise in the consumption of petrol and oil from 35 to around 40 quadrillion units and is projected to reach nearly 48 quadrillion units by 2030. Likewise, the usage of coal and natural gas started at 16 and 20 quadrillion units, respectively, in 1980. However, in 2008, both figures slightly rose to around 21 quadrillion units. By 2030, the use of coal is projected to surpass natural gas consumption and climb significantly to just under 30 quadrillion units, whereas natural gas usage is predicted to remain stable at approximately 25 quadrillion units.
Nuclear, solar/wind and hydropower consumption all began at around 3.5 quadrillion units in 1980. Nuclear and solar/wind each experienced a gradual rise to approximately 6 and 4 quadrillion units and will vary slightly until 2030. On the other hand, the utilisation of hydropower dipped to around 2.5 quadrillion units and by 2030, it is projected to level off.
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