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New online data tool gives users insight into how Wisconsin’s energy mix has changed over time

Solar energy has seen steady growth since 2015, while coal has decreased over the last decade

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Solar panels at Bayfield County highway garage
Solar panels have been installed at Bayfield County’s highway garage in Washburn. Photo courtesy of Chequamegon Bay Renewables

Ever wonder how much of Wisconsin’s energy comes from renewables and how that’s changed over time? The state’s utility regulator has a new online tool that makes it easier to find out.

The “Wisconsin Energy Statistics” portal provides a snapshot of energy use in Wisconsin, as well as that energy’s economic and environmental impacts.

The Public Service Commission of Wisconsin has published energy data in a physical book since 1976. In a statement, PSC Chair Rebecca Cameron Valcq said the new online resource aims to make that information more accessible.

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“This interactive online tool now makes it even easier for public officials, researchers and citizens to learn how we, as a state, are generating, consuming and developing electricity in Wisconsin as well as the progress being made on Governor Evers’ goal for all electricity consumed in our state to be carbon-free by 2050,” Valcq said.

Joe Fontaine is administrator of the agency’s Division of Digital Access, Consumer, and Environmental Affairs. He said the commission used to post the book’s pages on its website, but the new online portal streamlines the user experience.

“We have a really user-friendly format that we’re making available to people, so they can either find exactly what they want or just have a good browsing experience to learn a lot about the wide range of data that we have,” he said. “It’s a way to make it more accessible and more centralized.”

The new webpage also makes it easier for regulators to provide more up-to-date information on a regular basis, allowing users to track Wisconsin’s clean energy transition in real time, Fontaine said.

“This is going to be a lot more efficient to administer going forward,” he said. “We can make updates more quickly on more of a rolling basis and have more up-to-date data more quickly than we would if we had to pull together a formal physical book for publication.”

The portal has data through 2021, and illustrates long-term trends by providing an insight into Wisconsin’s energy sources and how they’ve changed over time.

The state’s annual solar generation has grown from 1.41 megawatt hours in 2015 to 830.54 megawatt hours in 2021. That’s enough to power around 150,000 homes. Over the same period, coal-powered electricity has decreased by nearly 38 percent.

“We’re seeing that we’ve already made a lot of progress towards Gov. Evers’ goals of zero-carbon electricity generation by 2050,” Fontaine said. “There’s great opportunities out there, (and) solar has grown because solar has become more economical.”

However, PSC data shows that coal was still the biggest source of electricity in Wisconsin as of 2021, accounting for 42 percent of the state’s electricity generation. It was followed by natural gas at 33 percent, nuclear at 15 percent, hydro at 3 percent and wind at 2.4 percent. Other electricity sources include petroleum, wood and wood derived fuels, biomass and solar.

Fontaine said coal represented more than 60 percent of electricity generation a decade ago. Because the online portal’s most recent data comes from 2021, he said it doesn’t take into account renewable energy projects that came online in 2022 and 2023.

If utilities maintain plans to retire coal plants, Fontaine said coal would decline to 21 percent of generation by 2028. By that point, he said coal will be outpaced by natural gas and offset by increases in wind and solar energy.

“As this gets updated over the next couple of years, it’s going to track the continued progress we’re going to keep making,” Fontaine said of the data tool.

The tool also provides data on energy sector jobs in Wisconsin, which account for 4 percent of total employment in the state. The biggest share of those jobs are in energy efficiency, with 56,241.

“The energy sector has always been an important part of Wisconsin’s economy, but it’s only growing,” Fontaine said. “There are tremendous opportunities associated with the clean energy transition. We’re seeing that in the job numbers we have now, and that’s another area where I think we’re going to track continued growth and continued opportunity going forward.”

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