7382_om_not-searchable
/en/energi-og-industri/statistikker/energiregn/aar
7382_om
statistikk
2008-11-11T10:00:00.000Z
Energy and manufacturing
en
false

Energy account and energy balance2006-2007

Content

About the statistics

Definitions

Name and topic

Name: Energy account and energy balance
Topic: Energy and manufacturing

Responsible division

Division for Energy and Environmental Statistics

Definitions of the main concepts and variables

Energy carriers
Sources of energy are called energy bearers. The units used to measure energy bearers are consistent with those normally used in the primary statistics. Coal, coke, crude oil and petroleum products are measured in tonnes, natural gas in standard cubic metres (Sm3), fuel wood, black liquor and waste and other gases in tonnes of oil equivalents (toe) and electric power and district heating in GWh. The energy bearers included in the energy statistics are specified below:

Coal : Anthracite, hard coal and brown coal
Coke : Coal coke and petrol coke
Biofuel : Fuel wood, pellets, briquettes, wood waste, wood chippings, sawdust, shavings, bark, black liquor, biodiesels, bioethanol and charcoal
Garbage/waste : Different types of garbage/waste
Crude oil : Crude oil
Petrol : Naphtha, auto petrol, extraction petrol and aviation fuel
Kerosene : Kerosene type jet fuel, heating kerosene and other kerosene
Middle distillates : Auto diesel, marine gas oil, light heating oils and heavy distillate
Heavy oil : Heavy fuel oils
Waste oil : Waste oil, paint and varnish
Liquefied gases : LPG (propane and butane) and NGL (propane, butane and ethane)
Natural gas : Natural gas in gaseous form and LNG (liquefied natural gas)
Other gases : Refinery gas, fuel gas, methane and CO gas
Electricity : Priority and non-priority power
District heating : Hot water and steam distributed via a district-heating network

Energy content, density and fuel efficiency

     

Fuel efficiency

Energy commodity

Theoretical energy content

Density

Manufacturing and mining

Transport

Other consumption

Coal

28,1 GJ/tonne

..

0,80

0,10

0,60

Coal coke

28,5 GJ/tonne

..

0,80

-

0,60

Petrol coke

35,0 GJ/tonne

..

0,80

-

-

Crude oil

42,3 GJ/tonne = 36,0 GJ/m 3

0,85 tonne/m 3

..

..

..

Refinery gas

48,6 GJ/tonne

..

0,95

..

0,95

Natural gas (2007) 2

39,7 GJ/1000 Sm 3

0,85 kg/Sm 3

0,95

..

0,95

Liquefied propane and butane (LPG)

46,1 GJ/tonne = 24,4 GJ/m 3

0,53 tonne/m 3

0,95

..

0,95

Fuel gas

50,0 GJ/tonne

..

..

..

..

Petrol

43,9 GJ/tonne = 32,5 GJ/m 3

0,74 tonne/m 3

0,20

0,20

0,20

Kerosene

43,1 GJ/tonne = 34,9 GJ/m 3

0,81 tonne/m 3

0,80

0,30

0,75

Diesel oil, gas oil and light fuel oil

43,1 GJ/tonne = 36,2 GJ/m 3

0,84 tonne/m 3

0,80

0,30

0,80

Heavy distillate

43,1 GJ/tonne = 37,9 GJ/m 3

0,88 tonne/m 3

0,80

0,30

0,70

Heavy fuel oil

40,6 GJ/tonne = 39,8 GJ/m 3

0,98 tonne/m 3

0,90

0,30

0,75

Methane/landfillgas

50,2 GJ/tonn

..

..

..

..

Ved

16,8 GJ/tonne = 8,4 GJ/fast m 3

0,5 tonne/fm 3

0,65

-

0,65

Wood waste (dry matter)

16,25-18 GJ/tonne = 6,5-7,2 GJ/fm 3

0,4 tonne/fm 3

..

..

..

Garbage/waste

10,5 GJ/tonne

..

..

..

..

Electricity

3,6 GJ/MWh

..

1,00

1,00

1,00

Uranium

430-688 TJ/tonne

..

..

..

..

1 The theoretical energy content of a particular energy commodity may vary. The figures therefore indicate mean values.

2 Sm 3 = standard cubic metre (15 °C og 1 atmospheric pressure).

Source: Energy statistics, Statistic Norway, Norwegian Petroleum Industry Association (NP), Norwegian Association of Energy Users and Suppliers, Norwegian Building Research Institute.

Energy units

 

PJ

TWh

Mtoe

Mbarrels

MSm 3 o.e. oil

MSm 3 o.e. gas

quad

1 PJ

1

0,278

0,024

0,18

0,028

0,025

0,00095

1 TWh

3,6

1

0,085

0,64

0,100

0,090

0,0034

1 Mtoe

42,3

11,75

1

7,49

1,18

1,055

0,040

1 Mbarrels

5,65

1,57

0,13

1

0,16

0,141

0,0054

1 MSm 3 o.e.olje

36,0

10,0

0,9

6,4

1

0,90

0,034

1 MSm 3 o.e. gas

39,9

11,1

0,9

7,1

1,11

1

0,038

quad

1053

292,5

24,9

186,4

29,29

26,33

1

1 Mtoe = 1 million tonnes (crude) oil equivalents
1 Mbarrels = 1 million barrels crude oil (1 barrel = 0.159 m3)
1 MSm3 o.e. oil = 1 million Sm3 oil
1 MSm3 o.e. gas = 1 billion Sm3 natural gas
1 quad = 1015 Btu (British thermal units)
1 joule (J) = 1 watt x 1 second
Source: Energy statistics, Statistics Norway and Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

Commonly used prefixes

Name

Symbol

Factor

Kilo

k

10 3

Mega

M

10 6

Giga

G

10 9

Tera

T

10 12

Peta

P

10 15

Exa

E

10 18

Production
In the energy sources balance sheet/energy balance sheet, energy production is divided into primary and derived energy bearers. Primary energy bearers include those that are produced without the input of other energy bearing raw materials. The primary energy bearers are coal, fuel wood, crude oil, naphtha, NGL and natural gas. The production of derived energy bearers includes the production of energy bearers in which other energy bearers are used as input, for example, petroleum products manufactured from crude oil in oil refineries or district heating produced through the combustion of waste.

Electricity is treated as primary production in the energy accounts and as derived production in the energy sources balance sheet. The opposite is true of fuel wood. The production of derived energy bearers outside the conversion sectors, for example the production of fuel wood and fuel gas is included in the energy accounts under "other supply". The energy accounts define the sectors that produce primary energy bearers as "extraction sectors" and those that produce derived energy bearers as "conversion sectors". Together, the extraction and conversion sectors are referred to as "energy sectors". The extraction sectors include coal mining and the production of crude oil, natural gas and hydroelectric power. The conversion sectors include oil refineries, thermal power stations, district heating plants and dual-purpose power stations.

Input of intermediate goods In the energy sources balance sheet, energy converted (item 8) represents the volume of energy bearers used as input in the production of derived energy bearers. This item includes inter alia the crude oil that goes to the refineries. The energy sector consumption not used to produce other energy bearers, but used for heating, etc, is entered under consumption by the energy sectors (item 9). In the energy accounts, all input, including input to conversion and input to heating, are entered under "energy sector inputs".

Raw materials
The term "raw material" refers to energy bearers that are not used for energy. This mainly comprises input of petroleum products used to manufacture chemical raw materials. For coal and coke, it is difficult to distinguish between raw material consumption and energy consumption. Accordingly, both the energy accounts and the energy sources balance sheet consider all industrial consumption of coal and coke as energy consumption. Raw material consumption of other energy bearers are separated in the energy sources balance sheet (item 10), but distributed by industry and fuel consumption in the energy accounts.

Consumption outside energy sectors
The consumption outside the energy sectors, net domestic consumption in the energy sources balance sheet (item 13), of coal, fuel wood, electricity and district heating is the same in both systems. There is a deviation in the consumption of LPG because the consumption of raw materials is included in the energy accounts. The consumption of gasoline, kerosene, middle distillates and heavy oil deviates because of different ways of treating international shipping, aviation and raw materials. The consumption of coal for the production of CO gas is included in energy converted in the energy sources balance sheet, while it is included in consumption outside the energy sectors in the energy accounts.

Transportation
The energy sources balance sheet has a separate item for energy consumed for transportation purposes (item 15). This means that the transport sector/item includes not only energy consumed by transport companies, but also consumption for transport purposes in other enterprises, including industries and households. The energy accounts place the consumption of all energy under the relevant consumer sector, regardless of whether the consumption refers to transportation, heating or processing. This leads to different ways of recording the transport oil, gasoline, kerosene type jet fuel, auto diesel, marine gas oil and heavy fuel oil. Aviation is treated differently in the two systems, as Norwegian transport companies' acquisitions abroad are included and purchases by foreign transport companies in Norway are deducted from the energy accounts. Military consumption of kerosene type jet fuel is entered under public administration, not under aviation.

International shipping
Regardless of a vessel's nationality, energy bearers supplied by Norwegian ports to vessels in international shipping are categorised as bunkering in the energy sources balance sheet and not included in the total consumption (item 4). International shipping is considered a separate transport sector in the energy accounts, so consumption is recorded under the item "consumption outside the energy sectors". The energy accounts also include Norwegian vessels' consumption of energy abroad. International shipping both buys and uses most of its fuel abroad. Correspondingly, the energy sources that foreign vessels buy directly in Norway are deducted.

Common energy unit for the energy accounts and the energy sources balance sheet
Both the energy accounts and the energy sources balance sheet are presented in two different types of units: in physical units (tonnes, GWh etc) and in a common energy unit, petajoule (PJ). Presented in PJ, the energy sources balance sheet is referred to as the energy balance sheet. The figures in PJ are calculated on basis of the figures measured in physical units, using factors for the theoretical energy content for each commodity. From 2006, some new tables are published, with all commodities presented in GWh.

The layout of the energy balance sheet differs from the layout of the energy sources balance sheet on several points: In the energy balance sheet, there is a column showing the total for all the energy commodities. There is also a column for waterfall energy, showing the primary stage for electricity produced by the hydroelectric power plants.

Item 1.2. "Production of derived energy bearers" has been moved to avoid double entries in the total column on the supply side.

Item 7. "Net domestic supply" shows the consumption of energy before the transformation processes begin. This level of measurement includes the production of primary energy bearers adjusted for imports, exports/bunkering and changes in stock. For example, crude oil is included in this calculation. To avoid double entries, the consumption of individual petroleum products derived from crude oil has not been included.

Item 13. "Net domestic consumption" shows the theoretical energy content of bearers delivered for end use - the energy supply. Thus the values at this level of measurement have a degree of efficiency utilisation of 100 per cent for all energy bearers on end consumption. Of course, in practice, this would be impossible. The loss of efficiency that occurs when the energy bearers are used to produce heat, run motors, etc is not taken into account. Take a furnace, for example: Some of the theoretical energy content will not reach the consumer as heat, because a furnace is not 100 per cent efficient. Chapter 6 in NOS Energy Statistics 2000 (see link below) contains a table showing the consumption of utilised energy. The consumption is calculated on the basis of figures from the energy balance, and the estimated thermal efficiency coefficient of different energy sources (see separate table).

In international statistics, the expression "Total primary energy supply" (TPES) is used. TPES = Total primary production + imports - exports - bunkering - changes in stocks.

The structure of the energy accounts in PJ differs only slightly from the energy accounts expressed in physical units.

Standard classifications

The industrial classification used is an aggregated and somewhat modified version of the EU standard NACE. The figures are even more aggregated in the published tables. In 2009, from and including the reference year 2008, the industry classification in the energy accounts / balances was changed according to the new NACE standard SN2007.

Administrative information

Background

Production

Accuracy and reliability