The following table may be used to determine eligibility for a permanent exemption based on oil and natural gas savings.
Average Annual Utilization of Oil and Natural Gas for Electricity Generation by State
| [BTU's per KWHR sold] |
| Alabama |
33 |
| Arizona |
802 |
| Arkansas |
1,363 |
| California |
3,502 |
| Colorado |
289 |
| Connecticut |
3,924 |
| Delaware |
3,478 |
| Washington, DC. |
895 |
| Florida |
3,177 |
| Georgia |
45 |
| Idaho |
0 |
| Illinois |
250 |
| Indiana |
53 |
| Iowa |
147 |
| Kansas |
686 |
| Kentucky |
34 |
| Louisiana |
4,189 |
| Maine |
2,560 |
| Maryland |
895 |
| Massachusetts |
5,250 |
| Michigan |
256 |
| Minnesota |
151 |
| Mississippi |
1,519 |
| Missouri |
57 |
| Montana |
60 |
| Nebraska |
139 |
| Nevada |
761 |
| New Hampshire |
2,695 |
| New Jersey |
1,894 |
| New Mexico |
1,528 |
| New York |
4,219 |
| North Carolina |
49 |
| North Dakota |
47 |
| Ohio |
36 |
| Oklahoma |
5,180 |
| Oregon |
0 |
| Pennsylvania |
771 |
| Rhode Island |
1,800 |
| South Carolina |
24 |
| South Dakota |
36 |
| Tennessee |
20 |
| Texas |
4,899 |
| Utah |
107 |
| Vermont |
105 |
| Virginia |
460 |
| Washington |
3 |
| West Virginia |
126 |
| Wisconsin |
72 |
| Wyoming |
75 |
Data are based upon 1987 oil, natural gas and electricity statistics published by DOE's Energy Information Administration.
Code of Federal Regulations
Example:
The proposed cogeneration project is to be located in Massachusetts and is to use distillate oil. It will have a capacity of 50 MW, an average annual heat rate of 7600 BTU/KWHR, and be operated at a capacity factor of 90%. The annual fuel consumption is therefore calculated to be 2,996×109 Btu/yr. (50,000 KW×7600 BTU/KWHR×.9×8760 HR/YR) The oil and gas backed off the grid would be calculated to be .2070×109 BTU/YR. (50,000 KW×5250 BTU/KWHR×.9×8760 HR/YR) since the proposed unit would consume more oil that would be “backed off” the grid, the unit would not be eligible for a permanent exemption based on savings of oil and natural gas.
Code of Federal Regulations
[54 FR 52895, Dec. 22, 1989]