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No, by the end of the 1880s, small electrical stations were provding electricity to a few city blocks in a number of U.S. cities.
No. Water can be used in a hydroelectric dam to generate electricity, but this does not make us use more or less water in our homes.
In the US: 120/240V. Newer homes generally have a 200 amp service.
In the US there was practically no electricity anywhere except in the large cities until the 1930s under FDR. Suburbs did not really become common in the US until the 1950s and they were immediately electrified as they were built.
Currently around 71%: About 49% of electricity is generated from coal, 21% from natural gas, and 1% from petroleum. Adding those together, you get about 71%.
No, by the end of the 1880s, small electrical stations were provding electricity to a few city blocks in a number of U.S. cities.
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98%
No. Water can be used in a hydroelectric dam to generate electricity, but this does not make us use more or less water in our homes.
9000 %
to power our homes and give us electricity :)
About 25 percent of all nuclear electricity is generated in the US. France is second with about an eighth. About 20% of all electricity in the US is nuclear. Almost 80% of the electricity in France is nuclear.
Conventional wisdom is about 50 percent of homes in the United States are un-insured.
5%
About 25 percent of all nuclear electricity is generated in the US. France is second with about an eighth. About 20% of all electricity in the US is nuclear. Almost 80% of the electricity in France is nuclear.
About 19 percent of electricity
More than 70% of US electricity is produced from coal.