Coal consumption, Britain 1800–1900
Chart showing how efficiency improvements lead to increased consumption rather than decreased consumption.
Watt's improved steam engine used far less coal per horsepower. Within decades, coal consumption across Britain had multiplied — because cheaper power made hundreds of new applications economical that previously weren't.

Jevons' Paradox: when the cost of a resource falls due to efficiency, total consumption typically rises. The saving is absorbed by new activity.