I'm going to work up a new model, and to do that, I'd like to have a breakdown of consumption that's more fine-grained than what's in the BP report. I'm looking to break both US and Rest-Of-World into categories such as the following:
Gasoline for personal vehicles
Gasoline for commercial and civilian government vehicles (e.g. police, fire, taxi)
Civilian aviation fuel
Civilian marine fuels
Fuel oil for home use (e.g. heating and cooking)
Fuel oil burned for electric power generation
Diesel for heavy equipment (construction)
Diesel for farm equipment
Diesel for shipping by truck and train
Feedstock for fertilizer production
Feedstock for petrochemicals and pastics
Military fuels of all kinds
Other uses?
I could use similar info on the other major fossil sources, natural gas and coal. The reason is that different uses are amenable to different levels of both efficiency improvement and substitution. For example, we probably can't use wind power or coal to run aircraft, but we could substitute natural gas or electricity for home uses. There's a lot more efficiency to gain (in the US) from personal vehicles than from petrochemical production. Etc.
If anyone knows of a good and comparatively recent source of this info, I'd appreciate a link, thanks!