This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Hawaii, sorted by type and name. In 2020, Hawaii had a total summer capacity of 2,994 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 9,079 GWh. The corresponding utility-scale electrical energy generation mix in 2021 was 65.4% petroleum-derived fuels, 11.8% coal, 7.3% wind, 5.6% solar, 3.7% non-biogenic waste, 3.1% biomass, and 1.2% hydroelectric. Hawaii's one geothermal plant, which previously supplied about 2% of the state's and 10% of the Big Island's electricity, was offline during 2019 to repair damage from the 2018 lower Puna eruption. The plant came back online in late 2020, slowly ramping up to its full operational level.
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| - List of power stations in Hawaii (en)
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| - This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Hawaii, sorted by type and name. In 2020, Hawaii had a total summer capacity of 2,994 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 9,079 GWh. The corresponding utility-scale electrical energy generation mix in 2021 was 65.4% petroleum-derived fuels, 11.8% coal, 7.3% wind, 5.6% solar, 3.7% non-biogenic waste, 3.1% biomass, and 1.2% hydroelectric. Hawaii's one geothermal plant, which previously supplied about 2% of the state's and 10% of the Big Island's electricity, was offline during 2019 to repair damage from the 2018 lower Puna eruption. The plant came back online in late 2020, slowly ramping up to its full operational level. (en)
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| - full-year 2021 (en)
- Sources of Hawaii's utility-scale electricity generation: (en)
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| - black (en)
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| - Biomass (en)
- Coal (en)
- Petroleum (en)
- Wind (en)
- Solar (en)
- Hydroelectric (en)
- Geothermal (en)
- Non-Biogenic Waste (en)
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| - This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Hawaii, sorted by type and name. In 2020, Hawaii had a total summer capacity of 2,994 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 9,079 GWh. The corresponding utility-scale electrical energy generation mix in 2021 was 65.4% petroleum-derived fuels, 11.8% coal, 7.3% wind, 5.6% solar, 3.7% non-biogenic waste, 3.1% biomass, and 1.2% hydroelectric. Hawaii's one geothermal plant, which previously supplied about 2% of the state's and 10% of the Big Island's electricity, was offline during 2019 to repair damage from the 2018 lower Puna eruption. The plant came back online in late 2020, slowly ramping up to its full operational level. Small-scale distributed solar including customer-owned photovoltaic panels delivered an additional 1,273 GWh to the six separate electrical grids serving Hawaii's major islands in 2021. This was more than twice the amount generated by the state's utility-scale photovoltaic plants, and enabled solar energy to account for three-fifths of Hawaii's overall electricity generation by renewables. The state's renewable portfolio standard is the most ambitious in the U.S. at 30% of capacity by 2020, ramping to 100% by 2045. The large dependence on imported petroleum liquids contributes to Hawaii having the highest average retail electricity prices of any U.S. state. (en)
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