Get the Facts
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46.3 million barrels of petroleum were imported for Hawaii's total energy use over the past year.
That's 36 barrels of petroleum for every man, woman and child living in Hawaii.
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$5.09 billion left the state last year to pay for imported petroleum; $4,000 for every person living in Hawaii.
That's like buying 10 million roundtrip tickets to Las Vegas.
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11.3 million barrels of petroleum were burned by the Hawaii utilities last year to make electricity.
11.3 million barrels of petroleum x $79/barrel = $893 million. That would pay a year's tuition for the 13,952 undergraduate students at the University of Hawaii at Manoa 8 times.
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The average residential meter in Hawaii uses 615 kWh/month.
That's $175/month spent on electricity - enough for 20 Zip Paks, 24 boxes of a dozen malasadas or 14 pounds of fresh poke.
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Hawaii ranks #1 in electric energy costs:
| 37.0 cents/kWh | Lanai |
| 35.6 cents/kWh | Molokai |
| 33.7 cents/kWh | Hawaii Island |
| 29.2 cents/kWh | Maui |
| 28.4 cents/kWh | Hawaii state average |
| 24.8 cents/kWh | Oahu |
| 11.9 cents/kWh | U.S. average |
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10.1 million MWh of power was sold last year by Hawaii's electric utilities.
That's the equivalent of 100 wind farms that generate 30MW, like Kaheawa Wind on Maui.
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60% of electricity sold by the utilities in 2030 will still be fossil-fueled, even if we meet the Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative goals.
Burning fossil fuels increases carbon emissions, which contribute to global warming.

