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EIA

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) provides official U.S. energy statistics, forecasts, analysis, and reports covering production, stocks, demand, imports, exports, and prices. Its data is used across energy trading, forecasting, analytics, risk, reporting, and operational workflows. EIA is the statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy. Its data, analysis, and forecasts are policy-independent. Publisher: U.S. Energy Information Administration - www.eia.gov

Oil
Power
Natural Gas
Renewables
Region:
US
Source Type:
Public source

What EIA provides

EIA provides U.S. energy statistics and reports covering production, supply and demand, storage, imports, exports, prices, and market developments. Its datasets span petroleum, natural gas, electricity, coal, renewables, nuclear, and total energy.

Two widely followed EIA products for oil and gas workflows are the Weekly Petroleum Status Report and the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report.

The Weekly Petroleum Status Report covers U.S. petroleum balances, inventories, production, imports, exports, refinery activity, and selected prices. The Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report provides national and regional estimates of working natural gas in storage.

Source links:

Data types covered:

Production, supply and demand, stocks/storage, imports, exports, prices, generation, capacity, forecasts, market reports.

Update frequency:

The Weekly Petroleum Status Report is usually released on Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. ET; the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report is usually released on Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. ET. Holiday schedules may affect release timing.

Connection requirements:

API key for API-based collection; no API key is required for EIA bulk downloads.

Common use cases for EIA data:

  • Market and supply-demand analysis
  • Storage and inventory monitoring
  • Forecasting and trading support
  • Reporting and benchmarking.
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How Shooju connects to EIA

Shooju connect to the data source you need either via one of 320+ prebuilt processors or set up a new one.

Shooju tailors the collection strategy to each dataset and business need. Critical data can be collected with near-real-time access where the source supports it, while broader datasets can run on a scheduled cadence with an appropriate embedded delay.

Here is how the process works for adding new data source to you new or existing energy data pipeline:

1. You send a new processor request to Shooju

2. Shooju evaluates the access method, format, update schedule, and downstream workflow before configuring the pipeline.

3. It usually takes from 2 to 8 days to scope, develop/adjust and set up a processor for data source you need.

4. Once connected, Shooju monitors ongoing ingestion, handles changes or failures, maintains the pipeline as part of managed delivery.

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Normalization and metadata enrichment

Shooju maps source data into its proprietary data infrastructure and enriches it based on how your business uses it.This can include products, units, locations, zones, assets, timestamps, report dates, and internal naming conventions, so data can be used consistently across workflows.

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Where the data can be delivered

Once collected and normalized, EIA data can be delivered into the systems and formats your team already uses, including:

  • Excel Add-in
  • REST API
  • Python
  • PowerBi
  • Snowflake/customer database
  • internal systems
  • Shooju Views / dashboards

What Shooju does not do

Shooju is not a data vendor and does not resell proprietary datasets. We help teams connect, normalize, monitor, and deliver the data sources they are entitled to use — including public sources, subscribed vendor feeds, and internal data.

Need

EIA

data in your workflow?

We’ll review what it would take to connect, normalize, and deliver EIA data into your existing workflow.

Book a 30-min Call

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