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7% decrease in British primary energy consumption in 2014

According to preliminary statistics released by the British Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), primary energy consumption in the United Kingdom fell by 7% in 2014 (-3.1% with temperature adjustment), following the downward trend of the last nine years. Primary energy production dipped by 2% to 112 Mtoe. Nuclear generation declined due to outages, while production of both coal and oil were at record low levels in 2014 (-10.5% for coal and -2.3% for oil). Since 2000 output of oil has fallen by around 8%/year. In 2014, the UK remained a net importer of petroleum products at 7.6 Mt. Gas production rose by 0.3% (start-up of the Breagh and Jasmine fields) but overall UK Continental Shelf output fell by 1.2%. Gas imports fell by 11% (-19% for pipeline imports but +21% for LNG imports).

The United Kingdom switched from coal to renewables: in 2014, the share of coal in the power mix dropped to 34% (from more than 37%) due to the conversion of a second unit at Drax to biomass and to reduced capacity. Reduced nuclear generation (20% of the power mix in 2014) and low gas prices raised gas-fired generation in 2014: the share of gas rose from 27% in 2013 to 31%.

The energy intensity (energy consumption per unit of economic output) dropped by 5.6% in 2014, thanks to a lower primary consumption and to a 2.6% GDP growth. The ratio has fallen at an average rate of 3%/year since 2000.

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