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Natural gas and HGLs continue to increase their shares of total consumption
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Growth in gross output continues to outpace manufacturing energy consumption growth
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Nonfuel consumption is dominant in the chemicals sector
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Four sectors account for most manufacturing energy consumption
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Natural gas was the most-used fuel for all end uses
Final consumption, end use, and fuel-switching results from the 2022 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey (MECS) are now available
Release date: August 6, 2025
First set of results from the 2022 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey (MECS), which include 35 new data tables and accompanying highlights, provide information on U.S. manufacturing energy consumption (fuel and nonfuel), end uses of fuel consumption, and fuel-switching capability.
The new data show:
- Manufacturing energy consumption continues to grow, in part, due to increased natural gas consumption
- Nonfuel (feedstock) consumption is greatest in chemical manufacturing
- Four subsectors—chemical, petroleum and coal products, paper, and primary metals—account for most of the manufacturing energy consumption
- Most subsectors cannot easily switch from natural gas to alternative fuels such as coal, electricity, and renewables
We will continue releasing the final 2022 MECS data through Spring 2026. A detailed schedule of the 2022 MECS release dates is available on the MECS data website.
Data Tables
2022 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey: Highlights from Data Release 1 PDF
Features
Preliminary estimates show increased total U.S. manufacturing energy consumption in 2022
Release date: March 20, 2025
Preliminary results from our 2022 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey (MECS) show that total U.S. manufacturing energy consumption increased 6% between 2018 and 2022. MECS is the only source for national estimates of energy-related characteristics, consumption, and expenditures for manufacturers in the United States.