1993 Public Use Data Files (ASCII Format)
WHAT IS RECS?
The Residential Energy Consumption Survey (RECS) is a
national sample survey of housing units. The survey collects statistical
information on the consumption of and expenditures for energy in housing
units along with data on energy-related characteristics of the housing
units and occupants. The survey is restricted to housing units that are
the primary residence of the occupants; the RECS does not cover vacant
housing units, second homes, or vacation units. RECS is conducted by the
Energy Information Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy. The
RECS was conducted in 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1987, 1990, and
1993. For the 1993 RECS, data were obtained for 7,111 housing units.
Energy-related characteristics of the housing units and occupants are
obtained in an on-site personal interview with the occupants. Energy
consumption and expenditures information are obtained from the energy
suppliers to the responding households during the Energy Suppliers Survey
that follows the household personal interview.
WHAT ARE THE RECS PUBLIC USE FILES?
The 1993 RECS Public Use Files are microdata files that
contain 7,111 records, representing housing units from the 50 States and
the District of Columbia. Each record corresponds to a single responding,
in-scope sampled housing unit and contains information for that unit about
the size, year constructed, types of energy used, energy-using equipment,
conservation features, energy consumption and expenditures (electricity,
natural gas, fuel oil, kerosene, and LPG), and the amount of energy used
for five end uses: space heating, air-conditioning, water heating,
refrigeration, and other.
WHAT IS THE GEOGRAPHIC LEVEL OF DATA AVAILABLE?
RECS data are available for the four Census regions and nine Census
divisions. State-level data are available for the four most populated
States (California, Texas New York, and Florida).
WHAT IS THE FORMAT OF THE PUBLIC USE FILES?
The Public Use Files are comma-delimited ASCII files.
HOW ARE THE PUBLIC USE FILES ORGANIZED?
Because of the size of the RECS database, the variables were grouped
into 9 files by section of Household Questionnaire:
- Section A: Preinterview Observation
Section B: Housing
Type
- Section C: Home Heating
- Section D: Air Conditioning
Section E: Water heating
Section F: Lights
- Section G: Appliances
- Section H: Conservation Measures and Usage
Section
I: Demand Side Management
- Section J: Fuel Used
- Section K: Fuel Bills
- Section L: Background Information
Section
N: Vehicles
- Section M: Program Participation
- Characteristics of Energy Supplier Data
- Energy Consumption
- Energy Expenditures
VARIABLES ON EVERY FILE
Several variables are frequently used in the analysis
of residential energy data. These include the type of housing unit, the
geographic location of the unit, and weather data for the location of the
unit. The nine variables on all 9 files are:
- HHID (unique housing unit identifier)
- NWEIGHT (household weight)
- QMAIL (mail questionnaire identifier)
- TYPEHUQ (type of housing unit)
- REGIONC (Census region)
- DIVISION (Census division)
- LRGSTATE (indicator for California, Texas, New York, and
Florida)
- HDD65 (heating degree-days to 65 degrees for 1993)
- CDD65 (cooling degree-days to 65 degrees for 1993)
HOW TO MERGE FILES
Each of these 9 files can be used by itself or be merged with other
files. By merging files together, a new file can be created that contains,
for each respondent, variables from two or more files. The variable HHID
can be used to link the files.
HOW TO USE WEIGHTS
The RECS sample was designed so that survey responses
could be used to estimate characteristics of the national stock of
occupied housing units. In order to arrive at national estimates from the
RECS sample, base sampling weights for each housing unit, which were the
reciprocal of the probability of that building being selected into the
sample, were calculated. Therefore, a housing unit with a base weight of
10,000 represents itself and 9,999 similar, but unsampled housing units in
the total stock of occupied residential housing units. The base weight is
further adjusted to account for nonresponse bias. Finally, ratio
adjustments were used to ensure that the RECS weights add up to Current
Population Survey estimates of the number of households. The variable
NWEIGHT in the data file is the final weight.
- EXAMPLE 1: SINGLE RESPONSE
The respondent with HHID = 5198 has NWEIGHT = 13,292. Hence this
respondent represents a total of 13,292 households. The site of the
respondent home was 1,600 square feet. Hence, the respondent contributed
1,600 times 13,292 = 21,267,200 square feet to the estimated national
total square footage.
- EXAMPLE 2: USING NWEIGHT TO ESTIMATE NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS
There were 865, out of the 7,111 RECS respondents, that used fuel oil
in their homes (USEFO = 1). Most, but not all, of these households use
fuel oil for space heating. The sum of NWEIGHT over these 865 cases is
10,791,313. Hence, the estimated number of households that use fuel oil
is 10,800,000.
- EXAMPLE 3: USING NWEIGHT TO ESTIMATE PERCENTAGE OF HOUSEHOLDS
The sum of NWEIGHT over all 7,111 cases is 96,631,492. This is also
an estimate of the total number of households as of July 1993. Hence,
the estimated percent of households that use fuel oil (for any use in
the home) is (10,791,313/96,631,492) times 100 equals 11.2 percent.
- EXAMPLE 4: USING NWEIGHT TO ESTIMATE TOTAL SQUARE FEET
To estimate total square feet, multiply NWEIGHT times HOMEAREA for
the 865 cases where fuel oil is used in the home (USEFO = 1), then sum
the product over the cases where USEFO = 1. The resulting estimate is
24,413,335,370 square feet. This should be rounded to 24.4 billion
square feet or 24,413 million square feet.
- EXAMPLE 5: USING NWEIGHT TO ESTIMATE AVERAGE SQUARE FEET
The sum of NWEIGHT over cases where USEFO =1 is 10,791,313. Hence the
estimated average square feet in homes that use fuel oil, is
24,413,335,370/10,791,313 = 2,262 square feet.
MAIL RESPONSES
If the field interviewers were not successful in
obtaining a personal interview, a short mail questionnaire was mailed to
the housing unit. Variables not on the mail questionnaire were then
imputed for the housing unit using a hot deck procedure. There were 115
observations obtained via a mail questionnaire. These 115 records can be
identified using the variable QMAIL.
FUEL USAGE INDICATORS
The variables USEEL, USEFO, USEKERO, USELP, and USENG are
indicator variables for the use electricity, fuel oil, kerosene, LPG, and
natural gas in the housing unit. They are on three files. They were
obtained using section J of the questionnaire and they are indicator
variables that equal 1 if the households uses the corresponding fuel and 0
otherwise.
HOW ARE THE VARIABLES THAT BEGIN WITH A Z DIFFERENT FROM THE
NON-Z VARIABLES?
The "Z variables" are also referred to as "imputation
flags." Imputation is a statistical procedure used to fill in missing
values for respondents that are otherwise considered to be complete.
Missing values for many, but not all, of the variables were imputed in
1997. The imputation flag indicates whether the corresponding non-Z
variable was based upon reported data (Z variable = 0) or was imputed (Z
variable = 1). There are no corresponding "Z variables" for variables from
the RECS questionnaire that were not imputed, variables where there was no
missing data, and variables that are not from the questionnaire.
HOW IS THE SURVEY RESPONDENT'S CONFIDENTIALITY PROTECTED?
There are no respondent names and address on these files.
EIA does not receive nor take possession of the names or addresses of
individual respondents or any other individually identifiable energy data
that could be specifically linked with a housing unit. Local geographic
identifiers and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Weather
Division identifiers are not included on these data files.
In addition, values for HDD65, CDD65, ELECRATE, and UGASRATE were
altered slightly to mask the exact geographic location of the housing
unit.
LlNKS TO EACH DATA FILE AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION
For each data file, a codebook is provided (both files
are in ASCII format). For files based upon the Household
Questionnaire, the corresponding section of the questionnaire is provided
(PDF format). To view and/or print PDF files (requires Adobe
Acrobat Reader) Download Adobe
Acrobat Reader .
Note: To DOWNLOAD one of the Text or PDF files
below, click on the file of your choice to open it, then select
FILE and SAVE AS, save file to your hard drive or a
disk.
File 10: Characteristics of Energy Supplier Data |
Data
File (Size - 799 kilobytes)
| Date Released: 03/13/07 |
Codebook (Size - 43 kilobytes) |
Date Released: 03/13/07 |
File11: Energy Consumption |
Data
File (Size - 1,786 kilobytes)
| Date Released: 03/13/07 |
Codebook (Size - 42 kilobytes) |
Date Released: 03/13/07 |
File12: Energy Expenditures |
Data
File (Size - 1,105 kilobytes)
| Date Released: 03/13/07 |
Codebook (Size - 39 kilobytes) |
Date Released: 03/13/07 |
Top of
Page
Return to Previous
Page
- For specific questions about RECS,Contact:
- Eileen M. O'Brien
- RECS Survey Manager
- Phone: (202) 586-1122
- Fax: (202) 586-0018
-
-
-
- URL:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/recs/93publicuse.html
If you are having any technical problems with this
site, please contact the EIA Webmaster at mailto:webmaster@eia.doe.gov
|