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Learn About Energy Efficiency

Get the Facts

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.


$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.


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.


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.


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

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.


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.