First commercial U.S. coal production
Commercial coal mining began near Richmond, Virginia, marking the start of large-scale fossil fuel use that would later power industry and electricity.
Educational timeline · not statistical advice
Explore roughly 250 years of American energy—from wood and coal to petroleum, nuclear, and renewables. Scrub by year, click a fuel or Legal to show only those events (click again to reset), and compare primary consumption mix from 1949 using EIA data. Pair with the U.S. State Electricity Map, FERC Order Index, and Standards of Conduct primer.
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Commercial coal mining began near Richmond, Virginia, marking the start of large-scale fossil fuel use that would later power industry and electricity.
Benjamin Franklin's kite experiment helped establish the connection between lightning and electricity—an early step toward harnessing electric power.
James Watt's improved steam engine made coal-fired mechanical power practical for factories, mines, and later railroads.
When the Declaration of Independence was signed, wood—a renewable biomass fuel—was the largest source of energy in the United States for heating, cooking, and light.
Robert Fulton's steamboat work helped tie steam power to American transport.
Rembrandt Peale and partners incorporated the Gas Light Company of Baltimore in June 1816—the nation's first commercial gas lighting utility. Service used manufactured coal gas for street lamps (first lit February 1817), predating drilled natural-gas wells like Fredonia (1821).
Note: Manufactured coal gas utility; distinct from 1821 Fredonia drilled natural gas well.
William Hart dug a 27-foot well in Fredonia, New York—the first U.S. well drilled specifically to produce geologic natural gas, distinct from Baltimore's manufactured-gas utility (1816).
Julius Robert von Mayer, James Prescott Joule, and Hermann von Helmholtz articulated that energy transforms rather than being created or destroyed—a foundation for modern energy accounting.
Daniel Halladay's commercially successful windmill pumped water across the American West—mechanical wind power before the grid.
Edwin Drake's drilled well near Titusville, Pennsylvania, launched the modern American petroleum industry.
Wood remained the primary fuel for heating and cooking in homes and businesses and powered steam in industries, trains, and boats.
John D. Rockefeller organized Standard Oil, pioneering pipeline transport and refinery integration that shaped U.S. petroleum markets.
George Brayton patented an internal-combustion engine that influenced later gas turbines.
Charles Brush deployed arc lighting systems in U.S. cities before incandescent dominance.
Thomas Edison's incandescent lamp made electric lighting commercially viable and set the stage for central power stations.
Lester Pelton's impulse turbine design improved hydro mechanical efficiency.
A dynamo at the Wolverine Chair Factory in Grand Rapids, Michigan, used hydropower to light lamps—early industrial use, not a public utility sale.
Note: Distinct from Pearl Street (1882) and Appleton public hydro sale (1882).
The Vulcan Street plant on the Fox River near Appleton, Wisconsin, became the world's first hydroelectric plant to sell electricity to the public.
Note: First public hydro sale; distinct from Pearl Street coal station (1882) and Grand Rapids industrial use (1880).
Thomas Edison's coal-fired Pearl Street Station in New York City began supplying electricity for household lighting—often cited as the first commercial central power station.
Note: Separate from Appleton hydro (1882), which first sold hydroelectricity to the public.
Charles Fritts built an early solar cell on a New York rooftop—efficiency was below 1%, but it demonstrated photovoltaic potential.
Coal surpassed wood as the nation's largest energy source—a shift driven by railroads, steel, and electric utilities.
Charles Brush operated a large wind turbine in Cleveland, Ohio—among the first U.S. installations to generate electricity from wind.
Mass production of automobiles created demand for gasoline; kerosene had previously been the main oil product.
Boise, Idaho, opened one of the first geothermal district heating systems in the U.S.
The Niagara Falls hydropower station began sending alternating-current electricity more than 20 miles to Buffalo, New York.
Charles Curtis's turbine helped utilities scale central-station power.
Anthony Lucas's January 1901 blowout at Spindletop, Texas, proved massive-scale oil production from Gulf Coast salt domes—launching Texaco, Gulf Oil, and the industrial petroleum era.
Frederick Cottrell's device reduced particulate emissions from coal plants.
Henry Ford's assembly line made automobiles affordable, locking in petroleum-based transportation for the 20th century.
The Supreme Court breakup reshaped U.S. petroleum competition.
PJM began as a power pool coordinating dispatch among utilities—early precedent for today's RTOs.
TVA integrated flood control, navigation, and power generation across the Tennessee Valley— a model of regional public power.
The Federal Power Act regulated interstate electricity transmission and wholesale sales, establishing the Federal Power Commission (predecessor to FERC).
Passed alongside the Federal Power Act, PUHCA broke up sprawling utility holding-company trusts and gave the SEC broad oversight of electric and gas corporate structures—shaping U.S. utility monopolies until repeal in the 2005 Energy Policy Act.
The REA brought loans and technical support to extend electric lines to farms and rural communities still without grid service.
Hoover Dam on the Colorado River began generating hydropower and transmitting electricity hundreds of miles—symbol of New Deal infrastructure.
The Natural Gas Act extended Federal Power Commission jurisdiction over interstate natural gas transportation and wholesale sales—foundational authority now exercised by FERC over pipeline certificates and rates.
Bell Labs demonstrated a silicon photovoltaic cell—ancestor of modern PV modules.
Grand Coulee on the Columbia River became the nation's largest hydroelectric dam at the time.
The 1.25 MW Smith-Putnam turbine on Grandpa's Knob, Vermont, briefly fed the local grid—decades ahead of the modern wind industry.
Enrico Fermi's team at the University of Chicago achieved the first controlled nuclear chain reaction—precursor to atomic power and weapons.
Stanolind Oil & Gas applied hydraulic fracturing in Kansas wells.
Conventional hydropower provided roughly one-third of U.S. electricity—a peak share before nuclear and fossil growth.
By the early 1950s, electricity had reached nearly all American farms—up from about 11% in 1932—closing the rural-urban gap.
Note: EIA cites 'almost all' by 1950; ClearPath cites 90%+ by 1953—presented as early 1950s.
Petroleum surpassed coal as the most-consumed U.S. energy source—a position it has held since 1950.
Experimental Breeder Reactor I in Idaho produced the first usable nuclear electricity.
The pumpjack became the iconic symbol of onshore oil production.
Bell Laboratories demonstrated a practical silicon solar cell—about 6% efficient—opening the path to space and grid applications.
The Supreme Court held that natural gas producers selling into interstate pipelines were subject to Federal Power Commission rate regulation—beginning decades of federal wellhead price controls later unwound by NGPA and decontrol acts.
The Shippingport Atomic Power Station in Pennsylvania became the first U.S. nuclear power plant to supply electricity to the grid for customers.
Note: Obninsk, USSR (1954) was the world's first grid-connected nuclear plant—outside U.S.-primary scope except as context.
Natural gas became the second-largest U.S. energy source, passing coal—reflecting pipeline buildout and utility fuel switching.
Charles Keeling's Mauna Loa record documented rising atmospheric CO₂—key evidence for climate science.
The Methane Pioneer carried liquefied natural gas from Louisiana to the United Kingdom—early proof of long-distance gas trade.
Subsea drilling technology expanded Gulf of Mexico production.
Pacific Gas & Electric opened a 10-megawatt unit at The Geysers in California—the first commercial-scale U.S. geothermal development.
Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela formed OPEC, later central to global oil supply and price dynamics.
Coal became the major fuel for U.S. electric utilities; today more than 90% of U.S. coal use is for electricity generation.
On November 9, a cascading transmission failure left roughly 30 million people without power across the Northeast and Ontario—catalyzing NERC and modern grid reliability thinking.
Phillips Petroleum and Marathon opened the Kenai LNG export facility in Alaska—the first U.S. plant built to liquefy and export natural gas, distinct from the 1959 Methane Pioneer transatlantic cargo.
Note: 1959 Methane Pioneer was a transatlantic LNG cargo; 1969 Kenai was the first U.S. export plant.
A January 1969 Union Oil blowout off California spilled crude along the coast—spurring offshore drilling moratorium momentum and stronger federal environmental enforcement.
Congress passed the foundational Clean Air Act establishing federal air-quality standards for mobile and stationary sources—distinct from the 1990 amendments that added the acid rain program.
Shell built an early large-scale CO₂ pipeline for enhanced oil recovery.
NEPA required federal agencies to assess environmental impacts before major energy and infrastructure decisions—foundational to modern project review.
Arab OPEC producers embargoed oil to the U.S. and allies; prices tripled and motorists faced shortages and rationing.
Los Alamos National Laboratory began hot dry rock experiments in New Mexico—a pathway toward engineered geothermal systems.
The Energy Reorganization Act split the Atomic Energy Commission into the NRC (licensing and safety) and ERDA—reshaping U.S. nuclear regulation for the post-TMI and post-Fukushima eras.
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act established the SPR to buffer the economy from supply disruptions.
Congress created the U.S. Department of Energy, consolidating federal energy programs and national laboratories.
Congress replaced the Federal Power Commission with FERC to regulate interstate electricity and natural gas.
DOE stood up SERI—later the National Renewable Energy Laboratory—to advance solar, wind, and grid integration research.
TAPS linked Prudhoe Bay oil to Valdez export terminal.
The Natural Gas Policy Act extended FERC authority to intrastate production and began phased wellhead price decontrol—starting the shift from regulated gas prices toward market clearing that completed in the 1990s.
The Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act required utilities to buy power from qualifying facilities—including small hydro, wind, and geothermal.
The Iranian revolution removed roughly 4 million barrels per day from markets; oil prices jumped about 150% in weeks.
After Three Mile Island, U.S. utilities effectively stopped ordering new reactors—ending the first commercial nuclear build-out and leaving a decades-long gap until Vogtle.
A partial meltdown at Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania, shook public confidence in nuclear power amid already slowing new plant orders.
Solar Electric Generating System I in California paired trough collectors with a conventional steam turbine—early utility-scale solar thermal.
Burlington Electric's 50 MW wood plant in Vermont was among the first built primarily to sell power, not just process steam.
Tax credits and PURPA contracts spurred a wind boom in California; capacity passed 1 GW though early turbines were inefficient.
The 1986 Chernobyl disaster in the Soviet Union intensified U.S. reactor safety culture, contributed to formation of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO), and reinforced licensing scrutiny.
The March 1989 tanker spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound released over 11 million gallons of crude—prompting the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 and global momentum toward double-hull tankers.
Congress passed the Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act, completing phased wellhead price deregulation begun under the 1978 NGPA—wellhead prices were fully market-based by January 1993.
Amendments required cleaner gasoline and diesel and promoted natural gas in power generation and transportation.
Cap-and-trade for SO₂ from power plants reduced acid rain.
Signed after the Exxon Valdez spill, OPA strengthened spill liability, response planning, and double-hull requirements for U.S. tanker operations.
EPAct authorized a production tax credit for wind and reformed utility holding company rules.
Order 636 required interstate gas pipelines to unbundle merchant gas sales from transportation—transforming U.S. gas markets toward transparent, competitive pipeline service.
For the first time, the United States imported more oil and refined products than it produced domestically.
Order 888 established the foundational framework for open, non-discriminatory access to electric transmission systems across the United States. It required all public utilities that own, control, or…
Order 889 is the companion to Order 888. It required transmission providers to implement the Open Access Same-Time Information System (OASIS) so that available transmission capability and pricing…
Order 2000 encouraged the formation of regional transmission organizations (RTOs) and independent system operators (ISOs) to administer regional transmission systems and wholesale markets in ways…
Market design flaws, drought, and supply shortages during 2000–2001 drove rolling blackouts and price spikes in California—reshaping FERC wholesale market rules and RTO governance.
Order 2003 standardized the interconnection procedures and agreements for large generators (generally greater than 20 MW) seeking to connect to the interstate transmission grid. FERC established the…
On August 14, 2003, a cascading transmission failure starting in Ohio left roughly 55 million people without power across the Northeast and Midwest—the largest blackout in North American history.
Note: 1965 Northeast blackout was the first major cascade; 2003 was the largest North American event.
Order 2003-A addressed rehearing requests on the large generator interconnection standardization rules, providing clarifications on study processes, cost responsibilities, and procedural…
Order 2003-B provided additional clarifications to the large generator interconnection rules following further rehearing requests, refining implementation guidance for transmission providers and…
Order 2004 established standardized small generator interconnection agreements and procedures so that smaller generating facilities could connect to the grid under clear, comparable terms across…
Coal use peaked around 2005 and has since fallen by more than half, largely because utilities burned less coal for electricity.
Congress expanded renewable fuel mandates and transmission incentives—part of the policy stack shaping today's grid.
Order 2006 standardized the interconnection procedures and agreements for small generators (generally 20 MW or less) seeking to connect to the transmission grid, creating a simplified path parallel…
Hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling in shale formations rapidly increased U.S. natural gas production and lowered prices.
Order 2004-A addressed rehearing requests related to the standardization of small generator interconnection agreements and procedures, clarifying compliance requirements for transmission providers.…
Order 2006-A addressed rehearing requests on the small generator interconnection standardization rules, clarifying study processes and cost responsibilities for smaller projects. FERC refined…
Order 670 implemented the Energy Policy Act of 2005’s prohibition on market manipulation for wholesale electricity markets (and related natural gas provisions). It established a clearer framework for…
Order 676 established updated procedures for entities seeking to sell wholesale electricity at market-based rates under blanket sales certificates. FERC reformed the market-based rate authorization…
Order 679 created incentive mechanisms intended to encourage transmission investment by allowing certain prudent investments to be recovered through rates under defined conditions. The order…
Order 676-A amended aspects of the blanket sales certificate and market-based rate framework established in Order 676, updating how sellers demonstrate lack of market power and refining related…
Order 693 addressed large generator interconnection agreement procedures, refining how utilities process interconnection requests for large generating facilities. It sits in the same policy family as…
Order 714 required electric utilities and other FERC-regulated entities to file their tariffs electronically using a standardized XML-based format, replacing the prior system of paper and PDF…
Order 890 significantly strengthened and reformed the Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT) framework first established in Order 888, finding that undue discrimination persisted across the industry.…
Order 890-A addressed requests for rehearing and clarification of the 2007 OATT reform order. FERC clarified and, in some instances, modified requirements established in Order 890 in response to…
Order 890-B provided further clarifications and modifications to the OATT reform rules following additional rehearing requests from industry parties. It addressed remaining disputes over specific…
Order 890-C addressed remaining rehearing requests and provided final clarifications to the OATT reform framework established in Order 890. The order resolved lingering compliance questions and…
Order 890-D issued final compliance-related clarifications and amendments to the OATT reform requirements. As the last in the 890 series, it resolved outstanding issues and provided definitive…
Order 2006-B provided additional clarifications to the small generator interconnection framework, addressing compliance questions from transmission providers and small generator developers about the…
Order 676-B continued incremental updates to blanket sales certificate rules, clarifying compliance expectations and market power analysis for entities authorized to sell power at market-based rates.
Order 714-A addressed rehearing requests on the electronic tariff filing requirements, providing clarifications on the XML format specifications, filing procedures, and implementation timelines. FERC…
Order 717 adopted revised Standards of Conduct for transmission providers under 18 CFR Part 358, moving to a functional employee-based approach for separating transmission functions from marketing…
Order 719 addressed wholesale competition in regions with organized wholesale energy markets, including issues that intersect with how jurisdictional boundaries and market rules affect competitive…
Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy funded high-risk energy R&D.
EPA determined that greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare—establishing the legal basis for federal GHG regulation of power plants and vehicles.
Order 676-C further refined FERC’s market-based rate policies for blanket sales certificate holders, addressing implementation issues raised after earlier orders in the 676 series.
Order 717-A addressed rehearing and clarification requests on the Standards of Conduct rules, refining how transmission providers implement functional separation, information sharing boundaries, and…
Order 717-B provided further guidance on Standards of Conduct implementation, resolving remaining questions about how the rules apply in specific operational and organizational contexts for…
An offshore drilling blowout in the Gulf of Mexico killed 11 workers and spilled oil for months—reshaping offshore regulation.
Order 676-D issued additional amendments to the blanket sales and market-based rate program, tightening analytical requirements and transparency for wholesale electricity sellers.
Order 676-E updated the blanket sales certificate framework ahead of later revisions in Order 676-F, addressing reporting and market power review practices for sellers relying on blanket…
SunShot targeted cost reductions for solar to accelerate deployment.
Order 1000 established comprehensive requirements for regional and interregional transmission planning and cost allocation, marking a landmark shift in how the U.S. power grid is expanded. The order…
Order 1000-A addressed rehearing requests on the transmission planning and cost allocation rules, clarifying compliance requirements and implementation timelines for transmission providers. FERC…
Order 676-F amended the market-based rate rules to update reporting requirements and refine the market power analysis framework for wholesale electricity sellers. This amendment addressed changes in…
Order 745 required organized wholesale energy markets to accept demand-response resources comparable to generation when they can meet established capability requirements, and to compensate them at…
Order 771 required Regional Transmission Organizations (RTOs) and Independent System Operators (ISOs) to compensate frequency regulation service providers based on actual performance, not just…
After Japan's March 2011 Fukushima disaster, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ordered fleet-wide safety reviews and contributed to licensing delays for new reactors.
A February 2011 cold snap triggered ERCOT load shedding affecting 3.2 million customers and gas curtailments across the Southwest. FERC and NERC winterization recommendations went largely unimplemented—foreshadowing Uri in 2021.
Order 1000-B provided final clarifications on the transmission planning and cost allocation framework, addressing remaining compliance issues raised by transmission providers and stakeholders. The…
Order 764 required transmission providers to revise their tariffs to facilitate better integration of variable energy resources, particularly wind and solar generation. The order mandated the…
Order 770 required the Electric Reliability Organization (NERC) to develop and submit new or modified reliability standards addressing gaps in transmission planning. The order directed NERC to ensure…
Order 771-A addressed rehearing requests on the frequency regulation compensation rules, clarifying performance measurement methodologies and payment calculations for regulation service providers.…
Wind became a mainstream generation resource with more than 60 GW installed nationwide.
Order 764-A refined and clarified aspects of the variable energy resource integration reforms adopted in Order 764, addressing implementation questions on scheduling, dispatch, and tariff changes…
Order 784 required transmission providers to allow third parties — not just the incumbent transmission owner — to provide certain ancillary services to transmission customers. Previously, vertically…
Order 792 updated the small generator interconnection procedures to better accommodate new types of distributed energy resources, including solar photovoltaic systems, fuel cells, and energy storage…
Order 676-G provided further updates to the blanket sales certificate and market-based rate rules, addressing compliance questions and refining certain reporting obligations for wholesale electricity…
Order 764-B addressed rehearing requests on the variable energy resource integration rules, clarifying implementation requirements for intra-hourly scheduling and other provisions. FERC provided…
Order 784-A addressed rehearing requests on the third-party ancillary services rules, providing clarifications on competitive procurement requirements, service specifications, and the criteria for…
Buried in the December 2015 omnibus spending bill, repeal of the 1975 crude export ban—instituted after the Arab oil embargo—let U.S. shale producers sell crude globally as domestic production surged.
Order 792-A addressed rehearing requests on the updated small generator interconnection procedures, clarifying technical requirements and implementation guidance for transmission providers and…
Order 819 established the formal process by which the Electric Reliability Organization (ERO) — NERC — may seek and obtain authoritative interpretations of mandatory reliability standards. Prior to…
Order 827 required RTOs and ISOs to shorten their market settlement intervals from 60 minutes to 15 minutes in wholesale electricity markets. Hourly settlement intervals were creating financial…
Biofuels surpassed wood as the most-consumed U.S. renewable energy source—reflecting ethanol in motor gasoline.
Order 676-H issued additional amendments to the market-based rate framework, updating requirements in response to changes in wholesale electricity markets and addressing new challenges in evaluating…
Order 807 addressed the compensation of non-synchronous generators — primarily inverter-based wind and solar resources — for providing reactive power service to maintain grid voltage stability. As…
Cheniere's Sabine Pass facility in Louisiana began exporting LNG from the Lower 48—closing the loop from 1959 import cargo and 1969 Kenai exports to shale-era global gas sales.
Order 807-A addressed rehearing requests on the reactive power compensation rules for non-synchronous generators, clarifying technical standards, capability calculation methodologies, and…
Order 842 required all new generators seeking to interconnect to the bulk power system to demonstrate they have the technical capability to provide primary frequency response — the automatic,…
Order 845 reformed the large generator interconnection procedures to better accommodate the evolving resource mix, particularly variable energy resources like wind and solar. Key changes included new…
More natural gas has been consumed in the U.S. electric power sector than in any other sector every year since 2018.
Order 845-A addressed rehearing requests on the generator interconnection procedure reforms, providing clarifications on surplus interconnection service provisions and other requirements. FERC…
For the first time since the 1950s, the United States exported more total energy than it imported—driven by surging oil and gas production after the shale boom and 2015 crude export repeal.
DOE funded demonstrations of next-generation nuclear reactors.
IIJA funded grid modernization, transmission, and clean energy demonstration projects.
February 2021 freezing weather knocked out gas supply and power plants across ERCOT; rolling blackouts left more than 4.5 million customers without power and renewed national debate on weatherization and grid resilience.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's National Ignition Facility reported fusion energy gain—a research milestone, not grid power.
The IRA extended and expanded tax credits for wind, solar, storage, and other clean energy technologies.
Order 2023 comprehensively reformed the generator interconnection queue process to address the unprecedented backlog of projects waiting to connect to the transmission grid, driven largely by the…
Order 2023-A addressed rehearing requests on the generator interconnection queue reform rules, clarifying compliance obligations and refining specific provisions in response to industry feedback.…
Natural gas consumption reached about 33.6 quads, driven largely by electric power sector use.
Under EIA's captured-energy approach, U.S. renewable consumption exceeded coal for the first time since about 1885—each about 8.2 quads.
Note: Under the prior fossil-fuel-equivalency method, crossover occurred in 2019.
Renewable energy consumption reached a record 8.2 quads, led by biofuels in transport and solar for electricity.
Georgia Power's Vogtle Unit 3 entered commercial operation as the first AP1000 design and first new U.S. nuclear reactor in decades, adding roughly 1.1 GW of capacity.
Heirloom opened a commercial DAC facility—early industrial carbon removal at scale.
U.S. Navy and EERE supported a grid-connected wave energy pilot off the Oregon coast.
Order 1920 advanced long-term transmission planning and related requirements for transmission providers, reflecting continued emphasis on forward-looking planning as the resource mix evolves and the…
Holtec International plans to return Palisades in Michigan to service—potentially the first U.S. reactor restart after shutdown.
This page is for learning and orientation only—not utility planning, compliance, or investment decisions.
Event summaries synthesize public sources including EIA Energy Kids fuel timelines, EIA Today in Energy, ClearPath innovation history, and UCS energy narratives. All 58 FERC orders from the Order Index appear on the timeline with links to each explainer. Use the Legal filter for FERC orders and major legislation. Consumption mix uses EIA Monthly Energy Review anchors (captured-energy basis for renewables from 2023 reporting).
TransANCHOR is not affiliated with the U.S. EIA, ClearPath, or other cited organizations.
Under the U.S. EIA captured-energy approach, U.S. renewable energy consumption surpassed coal in 2023 for the first time since about 1885—each about 8.2 quadrillion Btu. Under the prior fossil-fuel-equivalency method, crossover occurred in 2019.
Wood was the largest source of energy in the United States at independence—used for heating, cooking, and early industry until coal surpassed it around 1885.
Petroleum became the most-consumed U.S. energy source in 1950 and has held that position since.
Milestone events draw on EIA Energy Kids fuel timelines, EIA Today in Energy consumption analysis, ClearPath innovation history, and TransANCHOR FERC order references. Primary consumption charts use EIA Monthly Energy Review anchors from 1949. TransANCHOR is not affiliated with EIA or ClearPath.
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