Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Renewable Energy/Answer Key"

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'''Renewable energy (sources)''' or '''RES''' includes all sources of energy that are captured from on-going natural processes, such as [[solar power]], [[wind power]], water flow in streams ([[hydro power]]), [[biomass]], [[biodiesel]] and [[geothermal]] heat flows. Most renewable forms of energy, other than geothermal and [[tidal power]], come from the [[Sun]]. Some forms are stored solar energy such as [[Rain]]fall and wind power which are considered short-term solar-energy storage, whereas the energy in biomass is accumulated over a period of months, as in [[straw]], or through many years as in [[wood]]. Capturing renewable energy by plants, animals and humans does not permanently deplete the resource. [[Fossil fuel]]s, while theoretically renewable on a very long time-scale, are exploited at rates that may deplete these resources in the near future (see: [[Hubbert peak]]).
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'''Renewable energy (sources)''' or '''RES''' capture their energy from existing flows of energy, from ''on-going natural processes'', such as [[solar power|sunshine]], [[wind power|wind]], [[hydro power|flowing water]], [[biomass|biological processes]], and [[geothermal]] heat flows. Neither fossil fuels nor nuclear power are considered to be renewable. For a discussion of this, please see the [[#Fossil fuels|fossil fuels]] and [[#Nuclear energy|nuclear energy]] sections in this article.
  
Renewable energy resources may be used directly, or used to create other more convenient forms of energy. Examples of direct use are [[solar oven]]s, geothermal heating, and [[watermill]] and [[windmill]]s. Examples of indirect use which require [[energy harvesting]] are [[electricity generation]] through [[wind turbine]]s or [[photovoltaic]] cells, or production of fuels such as ethanol from biomass (see [[alcohol as a fuel]]).
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Most renewable forms of energy, other than geothermal and [[tidal power]], ultimately come from the [[Sun]]. Some forms are stored solar energy such as [[rain]]fall and wind power which are considered short-term solar-energy storage, whereas the energy in biomass is accumulated over a period of months, as in [[straw]], or through many years as in [[wood]]. Capturing renewable energy by plants, animals and humans does not permanently deplete the resource. [[Fossil fuel]]s, while theoretically renewable on a very long time-scale, are exploited at rates that may deplete these resources in the near future (see: [[Hubbert peak]]).
  
For aspects of renewable energy use in modern societies see [[Renewable energy development]].
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Renewable energy resources may be used directly, or used to create other more convenient forms of energy. Examples of direct use are [[solar oven]]s, geothermal heating, and [[watermill|water-]] and [[windmill]]s. Examples of indirect use which require [[energy harvesting]] are [[electricity generation]] through [[wind turbine]]s or [[photovoltaic]] cells, or production of fuels such as ethanol from biomass (see [[alcohol as a fuel]]).
  
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A parameter sometimes used in renewable energy is the tonne of [[oil]] equivalent (toe). This is equal to 10,000 [[Calorie|megacal]] or 41,868 MJ of energy.[http://www.iea.org/Textbase/stats/unit.asp]
  
==History of renewable energy==
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For aspects of renewable energy use in modern societies see [[Renewable energy development]].
  
The original energy source for all human activity was the Sun via growing [[plant]]s. [[Solar power | Solar energy]]'s main human application throughout most of history has thus been in [[agriculture]] and [[forestry]], via photosynthesis.
 
  
===Wood===
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== Defining renewable ==
  
[[Wood fuel|Wood]] was the earliest manipulated energy source in human history, being used as a thermal energy source through burning, and it is still important in this context today. Burning wood was important for both [[cooking]] and providing heat, enabling human presence in cold climates. Special types of wood cooking, [[drying (food)|food dehydration]] and [[smoking (food)|smoke curing]], also enabled human societies to safely store perishable foodstuffs through the year. Eventually, it was discovered that partial combustion in the relative absence of oxygen could produce [[charcoal]], which provided a hotter and more compact and portable energy source. However, this was not a more efficient energy source, because it required a large input in wood to create the charcoal.
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The concept of renewable energy was introduced in the 1970s as part of an effort to move beyond nuclear and fossil fuels. The most common definition is that renewable energy is from an energy resource that is replaced rapidly by a natural, ongoing process. Under this definition, neither fossil fuels nor nuclear power are renewable. Some, notably nuclear power and coal advocates, disagree with this definition, arguing that some renewable energy sources can have as great an impact on the environment as energy sources that don't technically meet this definition.
  
===Animal traction===
 
  
Motive power for vehicles and mechanical devices was originally produced through [[animal traction]]. Animals such as horses and oxen not only provided transportation but also powered mills. Animals are still extensively in use in many parts of the world for these purposes.
 
  
===Water power===
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Yash does guys a lot!!!!!!!!
  
Animal power for mills was eventually supplanted by water power, the power of falling water in rivers, wherever it was exploitable. Direct use of water power for mechanical purposes is today fairly uncommon, but still in use.
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== Modern sources of renewable energy ==
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=== Solar energy ===
  
Originally, water power through [[hydroelectricity]] was the most important source of electrical generation throughout society, and is still an important source today. Throughout most of the history of human technology, hydroelectricity has been the only renewable source of electricity generation significantly tapped for the generation of electricity.
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[[Image:Solar_panels_on_yacht_at_sea.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The solar panels (photovoltaic arrays) on this small yacht at sea can charge the 12 V batteries at up to 9 amperes in full, direct sunlight.]]
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''Main article: '''[[Solar power]]'''''
  
===Wind power===
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Since most renewable energy is ultimately "solar energy" this term is slightly confusing and used in two different ways: firstly as a synonym for "renewable energies" as a whole and secondly for the energy that is directly collected from sunlight. In this section it is used in the latter category.
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Solar power can be used to:
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* generate electricity using [[solar cells]]
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* generate electricity using [[Solar power#Solar thermal power plants|thermal power plants]]
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* generate electricity using [[solar tower]]s
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* heat buildings, directly
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* heat buildings, through [[heat pump]]s
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* heat foodstuffs, through [[solar oven]]s.
  
[[Wind power]] has been used for several hundred years. It was originally used via large sail-blade windmills with slow-moving blades, such as those seen in the [[Netherlands]] and mentioned in [[Don Quixote]]. These large mills usually either pumped water or powered small mills. Newer windmills featured smaller, faster-turning, more compact units with more blades, such as those seen throughout the [[Great Plains]]. These were mostly used for pumping water from wells. Recent years have seen the rapid development of wind generation farms by mainstream power companies, using a new generation of large, high wind turbines with two or three immense and relatively slow-moving blades.
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==== Drawbacks ====
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Obviously the sun does not provide constant energy to any spot on the Earth, so its use is limited. Solar cells are often used to power batteries, as most other applications would require a secondary energy source, to cope with outages.
  
===Solar power===
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Solar power is renewable.
  
[[Solar power]] as a direct energy source has been not been captured by mechanical systems until recent human history, but was captured as an energy source through architecture in certain societies for many centuries. Not until the twentieth century was direct solar input extensively explored via more carefully planned architecture (passive solar) or via heat capture in mechanical systems (active solar) or electrical conversion (photovoltaic). Increasingly today the sun is harnessed for heat and electricity.
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=== Wind energy ===
  
===Smaller-scale sources===
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''Main article: '''[[Wind power]]'''''
  
Of course there are some smaller-scale applications as well:
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As the the sun heats up the Earth unevenly, winds are formed. The kinetic energy in the wind can be used to run [[wind turbine]]s, some capable of producing 5 MW of power. The power output is a function of the cube of the wind speed, so such turbines generally require a wind in the range 5.5 m/s (20 km/h), and in practice relatively few land areas have significant prevailing winds. Luckily, offshore or at high altitudes, the winds are much more constant.
* [[piezoelectricity|Piezo electric]] crystals embedded in the sole of a shoe can yield a small amount of energy with each step. Vibration from [[internal combustion engine|engines]] can stimulate piezo electric crystals
 
* Some watches are already powered by movement of the arm
 
* Special [[antenna (electronics)|antennae]] can collect energy from stray radio waves or even light ([[Electromagnetic radiation|EM radiation]])
 
  
===Renewables as solar energy===
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There are now many thousands of wind turbines operating in various parts of the world, with utility companies having a total capacity of over 47,317MW.
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New wind farms and offshore wind parks are being planned and built all over the world. This has been the most rapidly-growing means of electricity generation at the turn of the [[21st century]] and provides a complement to large-scale base-load power stations. Most deployed turbines produce electricity about 25% of the time (load factor 25%), but some reach 35%. The load factor is generally higher is winter.
  
Most renewable energy sources can trace their roots to solar energy, with the exception of [[gethermal energy|geothermal]] and [[tidal power]] -- yet even these can be attributed to the sun's gravity. For example, wind is caused by the sun heating the earth unevenly. Hot air is less dense, so it rises, causing cooler air to move in to replace it. Hydroelectric power can be ultimately traced to the sun too. When the Sun evaporates water in the ocean, the vapor forms clouds which later fall on mountains as rain which is routed through turbines to generate electricity. The transformation goes from solar energy to potential energy to kinetic energy to electric energy.
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==== Drawbacks ====
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There is resistance to the establishment of land based wind farms owing initially to perceptions they are noisy and contribute to "visual pollution," i.e., they are considered to be eyesores. Many people also claim that turbines kill birds, and that they in general do little for the environment.
  
==Modern sources of renewable energy==
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Others have argued that they find the turbines beautiful, that turbines out at sea are invisible to anyone on the shore, that cars kill more birds annually and that turbines are continuing to evolve.
  
===Solar energy===
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While the winds don't die down when the sun sets, they do die down, and thus cannot be relied upon the generate continuous power. Some calculations suggest that 1000MW of wind generated electricity can replace just 300MW of continuous power. While this might change as technology evolves, advocates have suggested using wind power to pump water into reservoirs (see [[water power]] in this article), or power industrial applications that don't depend on a continuous electricity supply, like [[electrolysis]].
''Main article: [[Solar power]]''
 
  
Since most renewable energy is "Solar Energy" this term is slightly confusing and used in two different ways: firstly as a synonym for "renewable energies" as a whole and secondly for the energy that is directly collected from sunlight. In this section it is used in the latter category.
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Wind power is renewable.
  
There are actually two separate approaches to solar power, termed [[active solar]] and [[passive solar]].
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=== Geothermal energy ===
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''Main article: '''[[Geothermal energy]]'''''
  
====Solar electrical energy====
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Geothermal energy ultimately comes from [[radioactive decay]] in the core of the [[Earth]], which heats the Earth from the inside out, and from the sun, which heats the surface. It can be used in three ways:
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* Geothermal electricity
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* Geothermal heating, through deep Earth pipes
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* Geothermal heating, through a [[heat pump]].
  
For electricity generation, ground-based solar power has serious limitations because of its diffuse and intermittent nature. First, ground-based solar input is interrupted by night and by cloud cover, which means that solar electric generation inevitably has a low capacity factor, typically less than 20%. Also, there is a low intensity of incoming radiation, and converting this to high grade electricity is still relatively inefficient (14% - 18%), though increased efficiency or lower production costs have been the subject of much research over several decades.
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Usually, the term 'geothermal' is reserved for the thermal energy from the core of the Earth.
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Geothermal electricity is created by pumping a fluid (oil or water) into the Earth, allowing it to evaporate and using the hot gases vented from the earth's crust to run [[turbine]]s linked to [[electrical generator]]s.
  
[[Image:Solar_panels_on_yacht_at_sea.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The solar panels (photovoltaic arrays) on this small yacht at sea can charge the 12 V batteries at up to 9 amperes in full, direct sunlight.]]Two methods of converting the Sun's radiant energy to electricity are the focus of attention. The better-known method uses sunlight acting on photovoltaic (PV) cells to produce electricity. This has many applications in [[satellite]]s, small devices and lights, grid-free applications, earthbound signaling and communication equipment, such as remote area [[telecommunications]] equipment. Sales of solar PV modules are increasing strongly as their efficiency increases and price diminishes. But the high cost per unit of electricity still rules out most uses.
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The geothermal energy from the core of the Earth is closer to the surface in some areas than in others. Where hot underground steam or water can be tapped and brought to the surface it may be used to generate electricity. Such [[geothermal power]] sources exist in certain geologically unstable parts of the world such as [[Iceland]], [[New Zealand]], [[United States]], [[Philippines|the Philippines]] and [[Italy]]. The two most prominent areas for this in the United States are in the [[Yellowstone National Park|Yellowstone]] basin and in northern [[California]]. [[Iceland]] produced 170 MW geothermal power and heated 86% of all houses in the year 2000 through geothermal energy. Some 8000 MW of capacity is operational in total.
  
Several experimental PV power plants mostly of 300 - 500 kW capacity are connected to electricity grids in [[Europe]] and the [[United States|USA]]. [[Japan]] has 150 MWe installed. A large solar PV plant was planned for [[Crete]]. In 2001 the world total for PV electricity was less than 1000 MWe with Japan as the world's leading producer. Research continues into ways to make the actual solar collecting cells less expensive and more efficient. Other major research is investigating economic ways to store the energy which is collected from the Sun's rays during the day.
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Geothermal heat from the surface of the Earth can be used on most of the globe directly to heat and cool buildings. The temperature of the crust a few feet below the surface is buffered to a constant 7-14C (45-58F), so a liquid can be pre-heated or pre-cooled in underground pipelines, providing free cooling in the summer and, via a [[heat pump]], heating in the winter. Other direct uses are in agriculture (greenhouses), aquaculture and industry.
  
Alternatively, many individuals have installed small-scale PV arrays for domestic consumption. Some, particularly in isolated areas, are totally disconnected from the main power grid, and rely on a surplus of generation capacity combined with [[Battery (electricity)|batteries]] and/or a fossil fuel generator to cover periods when the cells are not operating. Others in more settled areas remain connected to the grid, using the grid to obtain electricity when solar cells are not providing power, and selling their surplus back to the grid. This works reasonably well in many climates, as the peak time for energy consumption is on hot, sunny days where air conditioners are running and solar cells produce their maximum power output. Many U.S. states have passed "net metering" laws, requiring electrical utilities to buy the locally-generated electricity for price comparable to that sold to the household. Photovoltaic generation is still considerably more expensive for the consumer than grid electricity unless the usage site is sufficiently isolated, in which case photovoltaics become the less expensive.
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==== Drawbacks ====
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Although geothermal sites are capable of providing heat for many decades, eventually specific locations cool down. Some interpret this as meaning a specific geothermal location can undergo depletion. Others see such an interpretation as an inaccurate usage of the word depletion because the overall supply of geothermal energy on Earth, and its source, remain nearly constant. Geothermal energy depends on local geological instability, which, by definition, is unpredictable, and might stabilise.
  
====Centralization and decentralization====
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The general public considers geothermal energy to be renewable.
  
Frequently renewable electricity sources are disadvantaged by regulation of the electricity supply industry which favors 'traditional' large-scale generators over smaller-scale and more distributed generating sources.
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=== Water power ===
  
====Solar thermal electric energy====
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''Main article: '''[[Water power]]'''''
  
The second method for utilizing solar energy is solar thermal. A solar thermal power plant has a system of [[mirror]]s to concentrate the sunlight on to an absorber, the resulting heat then being used to drive turbines. The concentrator is usually a long mirrored [[parabolic trough]] oriented north-south, which tilts, tracking the Sun's path through the day. A black absorber tube is located at the focal point and converts the solar radiation to heat (about 400 °C) which is transferred into a fluid such as synthetic oil. The oil can be used to heat buildings or water, or it can be used to drive a conventional turbine and generator. Several such installations in modules of 80 MW are now operating. Each module requires about 0.5 km&sup2; of land and needs very precise engineering and control. These plants are supplemented by a gas-fired boiler which ensures full-time energy output. The gas generates about a quarter of the overall power output and keeps the system warm overnight. Over 800 MWe capacity worldwide has supplied about 80% of the total solar electricity to the mid-[[1990s]].
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Energy in water can be harnessed and used, in the form of motive energy or temperature differences. Since water is about a thousand times heavier than air is, even a slow flowing stream of water can yield great amounts of energy.
  
One proposal for a solar electrical plant is the [[solar tower]], in which a large area of land would be covered by a greenhouse made of something as simple as transparent foil, with a tall lightweight tower in the center, which could also be composed largely of foil. The heated air would rush to and up the center tower, spinning a turbine. A system of water pipes placed throughout the greenhouse would allow the capture of excess thermal energy, to be released throughout the night and thus providing 24-hour power production. A 200 MWe tower is proposed near Mildura, Australia.
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There are many forms:
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* [[Hydroelectric]] energy, a term usually reserved for hydroelectric dams.
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* [[Tidal power]], which captures energy from the tides in horizontal direction. Tides come in, raise waterlevels in a basin, and tides roll out. The water must pass through a [[turbine]] to get out of the basin.
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* [[Tidal stream power]], which does the same vertically, capturing the stream of water as it is moved around the world by the tides.
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* [[Wave power]], which uses the energy in waves. The waves will usually move large [[pontoon]]s up and down.
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* [[Ocean thermal energy conversion]] (OTEC), which uses the temperature difference between the warmer surface of the ocean and the cool (or cold) lower recesses. To this end, it employs a [[cyclic heat engine]].
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* [[Deep lake water cooling]], not technically an energy generation method, though it can save a lot of energy in summer. It uses submerged pipes as a [[heat sink]] for [[air conditioning|climate control systems]]. Lake-bottom water is a year-round local constant of about 4 °[[Celsius|C]].
  
====Solar thermal energy====
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==== Drawbacks ====
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Hydroelectric power is probably not a major option for the future of energy production in the developed nations because most major sites within these nations with the potential for harnessing gravity in this way are either already being exploited or are unavailable for other reasons such as environmental considerations.
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Building a dam often involves flooding large areas of land, changing habitats, and while hydroelectric energy produces essentially no carbon dioxide, recent reports have linked hydroelectric power to methane, which forms out of decaying submerged plants which grow in the dried up parts of the basis in times of drought. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas.
  
Solar energy need not be converted to electricity for use. Many of the world's energy needs are simply for heat; space heating, water heating, process water heating, oven heating, and so forth. The main role of solar energy in the future may be that of direct heating. Much of society's energy need is for heat below 60 °C (140 °F) - e.g. in hot water systems. A lot more, particularly in industry, is for heat in the range 60 - 110 °C. Together these may account for a significant proportion of primary energy use in industrialized nations. The first need can readily be supplied by solar power much of the time in some places, and the second application commercially is probably not far off. Such uses will diminish to some extent both the demand for electricity and the consumption of fossil fuels, particularly if coupled with [[energy conservation]] measures such as [[insulation]].
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The other methods of energy generation (and cooling) have had varying degrees of success in the field. Wave and tidal power prove hard to tap, while OTEC has not been field tested on a large scale.
  
=====Solar water heating=====
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The general public mostly considers water power energy to be renewable.
  
Domestic solar hot water systems were once common in [[Florida]] until they were displaced by highly-advertised natural gas. Such systems are today common in the hotter areas of [[Australia]], and simply consist of a network of dark-colored pipes running beneath a window of heat-trapping [[glass]]. They typically have a backup electric or gas heating unit for cloudy days. Such systems can actually be justified purely on economic grounds, particularly in some remoter areas of Australia where electricity is expensive.
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=== Biomass ===
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''Main article: '''[[Biofuel]]'''''
  
=====Solar heat pumps=====
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Plants partly use [[photosynthesis]] to store solar energy, water and [[CO2|CO]]<sub>2</sub>.
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Biofuel is any fuel that derives from biomass - recently living organisms or their metabolic byproducts, such as manure from cows. It is a renewable energy.
  
With adequate insulation, [[heat pump]]s utilizing the conventional refrigeration cycle can be used to warm and cool buildings, with very little energy input other than energy needed to run a compressor. Eventually, up to ten percent of the total primary energy need in industrialized countries may be supplied by direct solar thermal techniques, and to some extent this will substitute for base-load electrical energy.
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Typically biofuel is burned to release its stored chemical energy. Research into more efficient methods of converting biofuels and other fuels into electricity utilizing fuel cells is an area of very active work.
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[[Biomass]], also known as biomatter, can be used directly as fuel or to produce liquid [[biofuel]]. Agriculturally produced biomass fuels, such as biodiesel, [[ethanol]] and [[bagasse]] (often a by-product of [[sugar cane]] cultivation) can be burned in [[internal combustion engine]]s or [[boiler]]s.
  
=====Solar ovens=====
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==== Liquid biofuel ====
  
Large scale solar thermal power plants, as mentioned before, can be used to heat buildings, but on a smaller scale [[solar oven]]s can be used on sunny days. Such an oven or solar furnace uses mirrors or a large lens to focus the Sun's rays onto a baking tray or black pot which heats up as it would in a standard oven.
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Liquid biofuel is usually bioalcohol such as [[methanol]], [[ethanol]] and [[biodiesel]]. Biodiesel can be used in modern diesel vehicles with little or no modification and can be obtained from waste and crude vegetable and animal oil and fats ([[lipid]]s). In some areas [[maize|corn]], [[sugarbeet]]s, cane and grasses are grown specifically to produce ethanol (also known as alcohol) a liquid which can be used in [[internal combustion engine]]s and [[fuel cells]].  
  
===Wind energy===
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The EU plans to add 5% bioethanol to Europe's petrol by 2010. For the UK alone this would require 1.2 million hectares of arable land to be used exclusively for the production of bioethanol. Within its borders, the country only has 6.5 million hectares of arable land.
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Other, more efficient sources of biofuel, such as palm and soya oil, would probably have a significant negative environmental impact due to habitat damage in the areas in which they are grown.
  
[[Wind generator|Wind turbines]] have been used for household electricity generation in conjunction with battery storage over many decades in remote areas. Generator units of more than 1 MWe are now functioning in several countries. The power output is a function of the cube of the wind speed, so such turbines require a wind in the range 3 to 25 m/s (11 - 90 km/h), and in practice relatively few land areas have significant prevailing winds. Like solar, wind power requires alternative power sources to cope with calmer periods.
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==== Solid biomass ====
  
There are now many thousands of wind turbines operating in various parts of the world, with utility companies having a total capacity of over 39,000 MWe of which [[Europe]] accounts for 75% (ultimo 2003). Additional wind power is generated by private windmills both on-grid and off-grid. Germany is the leading producer of wind generated electricity with over 14,600 MWe in 2003. In 2003 the U.S.A. produced over 6,300 MWe of wind energy, second only to Germany.
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Direct use is usually in the form of combustible solids, either firewood or combustible field crops. Field crops may be grown specifically for combustion or may be used for other purposes, and the processed plant waste then used for combustion. Most sorts of biomatter, including dried manure, can actually be burnt to heat water and to drive turbines.
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[[Sugar cane]] residue, [[wheat]] chaff, [[maize|corn cobs]] and other plant matter can be, and is, burnt quite successfully. The process releases no net CO<sub>2</sub>.
  
New wind farms and offshore wind parks are being planned and built all over the world. This has been the most rapidly-growing means of electricity generation at the turn of the [[21st century]] and provides a complement to large-scale base-load power stations. [[Denmark]] generates over 10% of its electricity with wind [[turbine]]s, whereas wind turbines account for 0.4% of the total electricity production on a global scale (as of 2002). The most economical and practical size of commercial wind turbines seems to be around 600 kWe to 1 MWe, grouped into large wind farms. Most turbines operate at about 25% load factor over the course of a year, but some reach 35%.
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Solid biomass van also be [[gasification|gasified]], and used as described in the next section.
  
====Bird kills and migratory disruption====
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==== Biogas ====
Nothing comes without a price, and along with the growth of large-scale on- and off-shore wind farms, problems have been identified of wind turbines that are mainly linked to noise "polution", concerns about bird migratory routes, ecosystem impacts during the construction phase and conflicts with people who dislike the visual appearance of the wind farms in a specific location.
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:''Main article: [[biogas]]
  
Governments as well as planners of present and future wind farm projects take these concerns seriously and try to focus on areas which allow to avoid these problems.
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Many organic materials can release gases, due to metabolisation of organic matter by bacteria ([[fermentation]]. Landfills actually need to release this gas to prevent dangerous explosions. Animal feces releases methane under the influence of [[anaerobic bacteria]].  
  
However, no study could so far prove one of the major human fears; namely that wind mills are massively killing birds. Compared to the huge bird killing that results every year from typical agricultural prcatice, regular car traffic or the static power lines the amount of birds that are killed by moving rotor blades is totally insignificant.
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Also, under high pressure, high temperature, [[anaerobic]] conditions many organic materials such as wood can be [[gasification|gasified]] to produce gas. This is often found to be more efficient than direct burning.
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The gas can then be used to generate electricity and/or heat.  
  
===Geothermal energy===
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==== Drawbacks ====
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All biomass needs to go through some of these steps: it needs to be grown, collected, dried, fermented and burned. All of these steps require resources and an infrastructure.
  
Geothermal electricity is created by hot gases vented from the fissures in the earth's crust. A wheel is turned by the pressure of the gases. The wheel turns the [[dynamo]] on the generator, which makes electricity.
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Biomatter energy, under the right conditions, is considered to be renewable.
  
Where hot underground steam or water can be tapped and brought to the surface it may be used to generate electricity. Such [[geothermal power]] sources have potential in certain parts of the world such as [[New Zealand]], [[United States]], [[Philippines]] and [[Italy]]. The two most prominent areas for this in the United States are in the [[Yellowstone National Park|Yellowstone]] basin and in northern [[California]]. [[Iceland]] produced 170 MWe geothermal power and heated 86% of all houses in the year 2000. Some 8000 MWe of capacity is operating over all.
 
  
There are also prospects in certain other areas for pumping water underground to very hot regions of the Earth's crust and using the steam thus produced for electricity generation, a method called [[hot-dry-rock]]. An Australian company, Geodynamics, is using this technology in a commercial plant in the Cooper Basin region of [[South Australia]] ([[2004]]).
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== Small scale energy sources ==
  
Geothermal heat can be used directly to heat and cool buildings. The temperature of the crust a few feet below the surface is a constant 45-58F (7-14C), so a liquid can be pre-heated or pre-cooled in underground pipelines, providing free cooling in the summer and, via a [[heat pump]], heating in the winter. Other direct uses are in agriculture (greenhouses), aquaculture and industry.
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There are many small scale energy sources that generally cannot be scaled up to industrial size. A short list:
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* [[piezoelectricity|Piezo electric]] crystals generate a small voltage whenever they are mechanically deformed. Vibration from [[internal combustion engine|engines]] can stimulate piezo electric crystals, as can the heels of shoes
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* Some watches are already powered by kinetics, in this case movement of the arm
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* [[Electrokinetics]] generate electricity from the kinetic energy in water that is pumped through tiny channels
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* Special [[antenna (electronics)|antennae]] can collect energy from stray radio waves or theoretically even light ([[Electromagnetic radiation|EM radiation]]).
  
===Water power===
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== Discussion of renewable energy ==
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=== Aesthetics, habitat hazards and land use ===
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Some people dislike the aesthetics of [[wind turbines]] or bring up nature conservation issues when it comes to large solar-electric installations outside of cities. Some people try to utilize these renewable technologies in an efficient and aesthetically pleasing way: fixed solar collectors can double as noise barriers along highways, roof-tops are available already and could even be replaced totally by solar collectors, [[photovoltaic cell|amorphous photovoltaic cells]] can be used to tint windows and produce energy etc.
  
Energy inherent in water can be harnessed and used, in the forms of kinetic energy or temperature differences.
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Some renewable energy capture systems entail unique environmental problems. For instance, wind turbines can be hazardous to flying birds, while hydroelectric dams can create barriers for migrating fish - a serious problem in the Pacific Northwest that has decimated the numbers of many salmon populations. Burning biomass and biofuels causes air pollution similar to that of burning fossil fuels.
  
====Electrokinetic energy====
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Another problem with many renewables, especially biomass and biofuels, is the large amount of land required, which otherwise could be left as wilderness.
  
This type of energy harnesses what happens to water when it is pumped through tiny channels. See [[electrokinetics]] (water).
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=== Availability ===
  
====Hydroelectric energy====
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Another inherent difficulty with renewables is their variable and diffuse nature (the exception being [[geothermal energy]], which is however only accessible in exceptional locations). Since renewable energy sources are providing relatively low-intensity energy, the new kinds of "power plants" needed to convert the sources into usable energy need to be distributed over large areas.
  
[[Hydroelectric]] energy produces essentially no [[carbon dioxide]], in contrast to burning [[Fossil fuels]] or gas, and so is not a significant contributor to global warming. Hydroelectric power from potential energy of rivers, now supplies about 715,000 [[MWe]] or 19% of world electricity. Apart from a few countries with an abundance of it, hydro capacity is normally applied to peak-load demand, because it is so readily stopped and started. It is not a major option for the future in the developed countries because most major sites in these countries having potential for harnessing gravity in this way are either being exploited already or are unavailable for other reasons such as environmental considerations.
+
To illustrate, note that production of 1000 kWh of electricity per year (a typical per-year-per-capita consumption of electricity in Western countries), in cloudy [[Europe]] would require about eight square meters of [[solar panel]]s (assuming a below-average solar conversion rate of 12.5%). Systematic electrical generation requires reliable overlapping sources or some means of storage on a reasonable scale ([[hydroelectricity|pumped-storage hydro system]]s, batteries, future hydrogen [[fuel cell]]s, etc).  
 +
So, because of currently-expensive energy storage systems, a small stand-alone system is only economic in rare cases, or in applications where the connection to the global energy network would drive costs up sharply.
  
The chief advantage of hydrosystems is their capacity to handle seasonal (as well as daily) high peak loads. In practice the utilization of stored water is sometimes complicated by demands for irrigation which may occur out of phase with peak electrical demands.
+
The geographic diversity of resources is also significant. Some countries and regions have significantly better resources than others in particular RE sectors. Some nations have significant resources at distance from the major population centers where electricity demand exists. Exploiting such resources on a large scale is likely to require considerable investment in transmission and distribution networks as well as in the technology itself.
  
====Tidal power====
+
=== Comparison ===
 +
Renewable energy sources are fundamentally different from fossil fuel or nuclear power plants because the Sun will 'power' these 'power plants' (meaning sunlight, the wind, flowing water, etc.) for the next 4 billion years. They also do not directly produce greenhouse gases and other emissions, as fossil fuel combustion does. Most do not introduce any global new risks such as [[nuclear waste]].
  
Harnessing the tides in a bay or estuary has been achieved in [[France]] (since 1966), [[Canada]] and [[Russia]], and could be achieved in certain other areas where there is a large tidal range. The trapped water can be used to turn [[turbine]]s as it is released through the tidal barrage in either direction. Worldwide this technology appears to have little potential, largely due to environmental constraints. See: [[tidal power]].
+
==== Nuclear energy ====
 +
''Main article: [[Nuclear power]]''
  
====Tidal stream power====
+
Nuclear energy is not considered a renewable energy, but is often compared and contrasted with renewables in the context of [[future energy development]].
  
A relatively new technology development, tidal stream generators draw energy from underwater currents in much the same way that wind generators are powered by the wind. The much higher density of water means that there is the potential for a single generator to provide significant levels of power. Tidal stream technology is at the very early stages of development though and will require significantly more research before it becomes a significant contributor to electrical generation needs.
+
Nuclear energy comes from [[nuclear fission|fission]].
 +
In physics, fission is when the nucleus splits into two or more smaller nuclei plus some by-products. Fission releases substantial amounts of energy (the strong nuclear force binding energy).
  
Several prototypes have however shown some promise. For example, in the UK in 2003, a 300 kW Seaflow marine current propeller type turbine was tested off the north coast of Devon, and a 150 kW oscillating hydroplane device, the Stingray, was tested off the Scottish coast. Another British device, the Hydro Venturi, is to be tested in San Fransisco Bay.
+
When the term renewable was introduced (see [[#Defining renewable|defining renewable]] within this  article), it was a generally held belief that the Earth's sources of nuclear material would be depleted within some fifty years. Since then, the [[breeder reactor]] was invented.
 +
By using breeder reactors, which transform materials that are not generally fissile (such as most [[isotope|isotopes]] of [[uranium]] into easily fissile material, such as [[plutonium]] and by harvesting nuclear material from [[mines]], [[seawater]] and [[granite]], we could theoretically continue to use nuclear power for billions of years, as calculated by  Bernard Cohen [http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen.html].  However, these calculations have been proven to be faulty. For example, they don't take the natural decay of uranium into account.  Moreover, they ignore rising electricity demands. They also ignore alternate fissile materials such as [[thorium]]. It is currently impossible to say how much fissile material will be available in the future, or how long it will last when used.  
  
The Canadian company Blue Energy has plans for installing very large arrays tidal current devices mounted in what they call a 'tidal fence' in various locations around the world, based on a vertical axis turbine design.
+
===== Drawbacks =====
 +
Nuclear fission, the common form of nuclear energy production, releases radiation and large amounts of radioactive material, which most scientists agree must be contained for thousands of years. During this time, the material could leak into the environment and cause devastation to ecosystems.
  
====Wave power====
+
===== Controversy =====
 +
Nuclear power is not considered to be renewable, because nuclear power plants actually generate energy; they do not tap into an existing flow of energy, but rather contain fissile materials in a reactor and force them to decay, releasing energy in the form of radiation and heat, which is used to generate electricity. Nuclear power generates radioactive waste, which needs to be safely stored. Finding a site that will remain safe for several thousands of years isn't easy. In the U.S., a proposal to store the nation's nuclear waste under [[Yucca Mountain]] in [[Nevada]] has generated controversy.
  
Harnessing power from wave motion is a possibility which might yield much more energy than tides. The feasibility of this has been investigated, particularly in the UK. Generators either coupled to floating devices or turned by air displaced by waves in a hollow concrete structure would produce electricity for delivery to shore. Numerous practical problems have frustrated progress.
+
Nuclear power is a limited power. ''Using'' fissile materials means depleting them, while renewable energy sources such as the wind can in realistic terms be tapped indefinitely, by any number of turbines. Increasing energy output through wind turbines would involve erecting additional wind turbines, while increasing energy output through nuclear power brings the moment of depletion closer.
  
A 100-400 kW prototype shore based wave power generator is being constructed at Port Kembla in Australia, due for completion in January, 2005. The energy of waves crashing against the shore is absorbed by an air driven generator and converted to electricity. For countries with large coastlines and rough sea conditions the energy density of breaking waves offers the possibility of generating electricity in utility volumes. Excess capacity in periods of rough sea could be used to generate renewable Hydrogen.  
+
The amount of uranium in the seas is currently being replenished by rivers through erosion of underground resources at a rate of 32,000 tonnes per year[http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen.html]. This could supply about 25 times the current world demand for electricity for billions of years.
  
====Ocean thermal energy conversion====
+
Some critics of nuclear energy argue that nuclear energy could lead to the proliferation of [[nuclear weapon]]s technology, since some nuclear reactors create the materials necessary for these weapons. While it's true that breeder reactors generate large amounts of plutonium for use in nuclear reactors, plutonium is a base component of [[nuclear bomb|nuclear fission bombs]].
  
[[Ocean thermal energy conversion]] is a relatively unproven technology, though it was first used by the French engineer [[Jacques Arsene d'Arsonval]] in 1881. The difference in temperature between water near the surface and deeper water can be as much as 20 °C. The warm water is used to make a liquid such as [[ammonia]] evaporate, causing it to expand. The expanding gas forces its way through turbines, after which it is condensed using the colder water and the cycle can begin again. Read the Millennial Project for more information.
+
==== Fossil fuels ====
 +
''Main article: [[Fossil fuel]]''
  
====Deep lake water cooling====
+
Fossil fuels are not considered a renewable energy source, but are often compared and contrasted with renewables in the context of [[future energy development]].
  
[[Deep lake water cooling]] is the use of cold water piped from a lake bottom and used for cooling. [[Energy]] measures [[mechanical work| work]] or [[heat]] exchange; although this technology doesn't ''generate'' energy that can do work, water-cooling is a form of heat exchange. That is, this technology is an efficient, renewable [[substitute good|substitute]] for expensive [[air conditioning]] which requires expensive, [[peak demand]] electrical generation which, typically uses Fossil fuels. Like geothermal energy and unlike many other forms of renewable energy, water-cooling taps a reliable supply because lake-bottom water is a year-round constant 4 °[[Celsius|C]].
+
Fossil fuels are generally thought to be the altered remnants of ancient plant and animal life deposited in sedimentary rocks. They were formed millions of years ago during the Davonian period, and have rested underground, mostly dormant, since that time.
  
===Biomass===
+
===== Controversy =====
 +
The coal industry in the US is publicly claiming coal is renewable energy because the coal was originally biomass.  However, the biomass of fossil fuels was produced on the time scale of millions of years through a series of events and it is considered to be a deposit of energy, not an energy flow. Some scientist hold the view that the formation of fossil fuels was a one-time event, made possible by unique conditions during the [[Devonian]] period, such as increased oxygen levels and huge swamps.
  
[[Biomass]], also known as biomatter, can be used directly as fuel or to produce liquid [[biofuel]]. Agriculturally produced biomass fuels, such as biodiesel, [[ethanol]] and [[bagasse]] (often a by-product of [[sugar cane]] cultivation) can be burned in [[internal combustion engine]]s or [[boiler]]s.
+
When the term renewable was introduced (see [[Renewable energy#Defining renewable|Defining renewable]] within this  article), it was a generally held belief that the Earth's sources would be depleted within some fifty years.  
 +
Since then, large deposits of deep-Earth oil have been found, which upset the timetable, there is no denying that eventually Earth will run out of fossil fuels. (See [[peak oil]]).
  
====Liquid biofuel====
+
=== Transmission ===
  
Liquid biofuel is usually bioalcohols such as [[methanol]], [[ethanol]] and [[biodiesel]]. Biodiesel can be used in modern diesel vehicles with little or no modification and can be obtained from waste and crude vegetable and animal oil and fats ([[lipid]]s). In some areas [[maize|corn]], [[sugarbeet]]s, cane and grasses are grown specifically to produce ethanol (also known as alcohol) a liquid which can be used in [[internal combustion engine]]s and [[fuel cells]]. The EU plans to have 20% of Europe's vehicles run on biofuels by 2020. Unfortunately, the amount of land required to grow such fuels is very large - for example, the entire area of arable land in the UK totals under 60,000 km&sup2;; the amount of land required to produce the UK requirement for biodiesel is 260,000 km&sup2;, thus to produce enough biofuel to meet the EU's requirements, the UK will have to turn almost it's entire arable land over to the production of Rape. Other more efficient sources of biofuel, such as Palm and Soya Oil, have a significant negative impact due to habitat damage in the areas in which they are grown.
+
==== Distributed generation ====
 +
If renewable and [[distributed generation]] were to become widespread, [[electric power transmission]] and [[electricity distribution]] systems might no longer be the main distributors of electrical energy but would operate to balance the electricity needs of local communities. Those with surplus energy would sell to areas needing "top ups". That is, network operation would require a shift from 'passive management' - where generators are hooked up and the system is operated to get electricity 'downstream' to the consumer - to 'active management', wherein generators are spread across a network and inputs and outputs need to be constantly monitored to ensure proper balancing occurs within the system. Some Governments and regulators are moving to address this, though much remains to be done. One potential solution is the increased use of active management of electricity transmission and distribution networks. This will require significant changes in the way that such networks are operated.
  
====Solid biomass====
+
However, on a small scale, use of renewable energy that can often be produced "on the spot" lowers the requirements [[electricity distribution]] systems have to fulfill. Current systems, while rarely economically efficient, have proven an average household with a solar panel array and energy storage system of the right size needs electricity from outside sources for only a few hours every week. Hence, advocates of renewable energy believe electricity distribution systems will become smaller and easier to manage, rather than the opposite.
  
Direct use is usually in the form of combustible solids, either firewood or combustible field crops. Field crops may be grown specifically for combustion or may be used for other purposes, and the processed plant waste then used for combustion. Most sorts of biomatter, including dried manure, can actually be burnt to heat water and to drive turbines. Plants partly use [[photosynthesis]] to store solar energy, water and [[CO2|CO]]<sub>2</sub>. [[Sugar cane]] residue, [[wheat]] chaff, [[maize|corn cobs]] and other plant matter can be, and is, burnt quite successfully. The process releases no net CO<sub>2</sub>.
+
==== Energy storage====
  
====Biogas====
+
See also: [[Grid energy storage]] and the section on energy storage in [[#Energy development#Energy storage|Energy development]].
:''Main article: [[biogas]]
 
  
Animal feces releases methane under the influence of [[anaerobic bacteria]] which can also be used to generate electricity.  
+
== Historical usage of (renewable) energy ==
 +
In times when fossil fuels and nuclear power where not available, only renewable energy sources were used (though one might argue that clear cutting to provide firewood is hardly sustainable).
  
==Is this energy source renewable?==
+
=== Wood ===
The most common definition of renewable energy includes all forms of energy that tap into natural cycles which are powered by the daily solar radiation, gravity or the warmth of the earth.  
+
[[Wood fuel|Wood]] was the earliest manipulated energy source in human history, being used as a thermal energy source through burning, and it is still important in this context today. Burning wood was important for both [[cooking]] and providing heat, enabling human presence in cold climates. Special types of wood cooking, [[drying (food)|food dehydration]] and [[smoking (food)|smoke curing]], also enabled human societies to safely store perishable foodstuffs through the year. Eventually, it was discovered that partial combustion in the relative absence of oxygen could produce [[charcoal]], which provided a hotter and more compact and portable energy source. However, this was not a more efficient energy source, because it required a large input in wood to create the charcoal.
  
For these types of energy the "consumed fuel" is generated (renewed) by nature within a well known period of time (a day, a year) and the impact of their usage is regional and overseeable within a humans life time.
+
=== Animal traction ===
 +
Motive power for vehicles and mechanical devices was originally produced through [[animal traction]]. Animals such as horses and oxen not only provided transportation but also powered mills. Animals are still extensively in use in many parts of the world for these purposes.
  
However, even renewable energy can be used in a non [[sustainable]] way (e.g. biomasse, water). Therefore some legal documents and some political discourses focus on the promotion of sustainable energy, to include only those way of utilizing renewable energy that do not harm the environment during use. For example, large hydro power plants are often excluded. (see:[http://www.panda.org/climate/goldstandard/ WWF Gold Standard])
+
=== Water power ===
 
+
Animal power for mills was eventually supplanted by water power, the power of falling water in rivers, wherever it was exploitable. Direct use of water power for mechanical purposes is today fairly uncommon, but still in use.
===Nuclear energy===
+
Originally, water power through [[hydroelectricity]] was the most important source of electrical generation throughout society, and is still an important source today. Throughout most of the history of human technology, hydroelectricity has been the only renewable source of electricity generation significantly tapped for the generation of electricity.
 
 
Sources of [[nuclear energy]] on [[Earth]] are very large, which makes this resource similar to renewable resources in size. In present-day [[nuclear reactor]]s [[fissile]] [[uranium]] can be used, which is an exhaustible resource on the order of a hundred years. Only by transformation of nonfissile [[isotope]]s of uranium and [[thorium]] in [[breeder reactor]]s does nuclear fission become a long-term resource. With these reactors, use of very diluted uranium resources becomes feasible. Uranium can be extracted from [[mines]], [[seawater]] and [[granite]] with a positive [[life cycle energy analysis|life-cycle]] energy balance. The amount of uranium in the seas is replenished by rivers through erosion of underground resources at a rate of 32,000 tonnes per year. [http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen.html] According to [[Bernard Cohen]], this could provide 25 times the world's present electricity usage. [http://www.phyast.pitt.edu/~blc/book/chapter13.html]
 
 
 
Estimates of the lifespan of breeder reactor power (not the power plants themself) vary from millions of years to billions, even lasting longer than the sun itself. [http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen.html] As recorded civilization is only thousands of years old, even the conservative estimates indicate effectively inexhaustible energy.
 
 
 
Critics point out that inexhaustible energy supply is not the main criteria for renewable energy sources. The attempt to declare nuclear energy as renewable also ignores the environmentally harmful [[nuclear waste]] that is produced and ignores the environmental impact from a single significant radiation leakage accident (see [[Yucca Mountain]]). Other critics point to the possible proliferation of [[nuclear weapon]]s technology as a consequence of widespread nuclear power technology, since some nuclear reactors create the materials necessary for these weapons as well.  
 
  
Man-made [[nuclear fusion]] of light elements, such as [[hydrogen]], is not yet practical except for destructive purposes ([[hydrogen bomb]]).
+
=== Wind power ===
 +
[[Wind power]] has been used for several hundred years. It was originally used via large sail-blade [[windmill]]s with slow-moving blades, such as those seen in the [[Netherlands]] and mentioned in [[Don Quixote]]. These large mills usually either pumped water or powered small mills. Newer windmills featured smaller, faster-turning, more compact units with more
 +
blades, such as those seen throughout the [[Great Plains]]. These were mostly used for pumping water from wells. Recent years have seen the rapid development of wind generation farms by mainstream power companies, using a new generation of large, high wind turbines with two or three immense and relatively slow-moving blades.
  
In summary nuclear energy is not considered a renewable energy by the general public.
+
=== Solar power ===
 +
[[Solar power]] as a direct energy source has been not been captured by mechanical systems until recent human history, but was captured as an energy source through architecture in certain societies for many centuries. Not until the twentieth century was direct solar input extensively explored via more carefully planned architecture (passive solar) or via heat capture in mechanical systems (active solar) or electrical conversion (photovoltaic). Increasingly today the sun is
 +
harnessed for heat and electricity.
  
===Is coal a renewable energy?===
 
 
The coal industry is trying to sell coal as a renewable energy because the coal was originally generated from biomass and biomass is classified as renewable. However, since the used coal resources are not renewed within the human time scale the general public does not consider coal (or fossil oil) as a renewable energy.
 
 
 
===Is geothermal energy renewable?===
 
 
Although geothermal sites are capable of providing heat for many decades, eventually specific locations cool down. Some interpret this as meaning a specific geothermal location can undergo depletion. Others see such an interpretation as an inaccurate usage of the word depletion because the overall geothermal energy on earth remains nearly constant. There is disagreement whether geothermal can be considered a renewable energy source simply because it does not harm the environment. See [[geothermal power]] for further information. [http://www.geothermie.de/egec-geothernet/ci_prof/australia_ozean/new_zealand/0080.PDF] [http://eng.idnadarraduneyti.is/ministries/homepage//nr/1191]
 
 
The general public considers geothermal energy as renewable.
 
 
==Criticism and discussion of renewable energy==
 
 
Renewable energy sources are fundamentally different from fossil fuel or nuclear power plants because of their widespread occurrence and abundance - the Sun will 'power' these 'power plants' (meaning sunlight, the wind, flowing water, etc.) for the next 4 billion years. The primary advantage of many renewable energy sources are their lack of greenhouse gas and other emissions in comparison with fossil fuel combustion. Some renewable sources do not emit any additional [[carbon dioxide]] and do not introduce any new risks such as [[nuclear waste]]. In fact, most biomass actively [[Carbon sequestration|sequester]]s carbon dioxide while growing.
 
 
===Aesthetics, habitat hazards and land use===
 
Some people dislike the aesthetics of [[wind turbines]] or bring up nature conservation issues when it comes to large solar-electric installations outside of cities. Some people try to utilize these renewable technologies in an efficient and aesthetically pleasing way: fixed solar collectors can double as noise barriers along highways, roof-tops are available already and could even be replaced totally by solar collectors, [[photovoltaic cell|amorphous photovoltaic cells]] can be used to tint windows and produce energy etc.
 
 
Some renewable energy capture systems entail unique environmental problems. For instance, wind turbines can be hazardous to flying birds, while hydroelectric dams can create barriers for migrating fish - a serious problem in the Pacific Northwest that has decimated the numbers of many salmon populations. Burning biomass and biofuels causes air pollution similar to that of burning fossil fuels.
 
 
Another problem with many renewables, especially biomass and biofuels, is the large amount of land required, which otherwise could be left as wilderness.
 
 
===Availability===
 
 
Another inherent difficulty with renewables is their variable and diffuse nature (with the exception being [[geothermal energy]], which is however only accessible where the earth's crust is thin, such as near [[hot spring]]s and natural [[geyser]]s). Since renewable energy sources are providing relatively low-intensity energy, the new kinds of "power plants" needed to convert the sources into usable energy need to be distributed over large areas. To make the phrases 'low-intensity' and 'large area' easier to understand, note that in order to produce 1000 kWh of electricity per year (a typical per-year-per-capita consumption of electricity in Western countries), a home owner in cloudy [[Europe]] needs to use eight square meters of [[solar panel]]s (assuming a below-average solar conversion rate of 12.5%). Systematic electrical generation requires reliable overlapping sources or some means of storage on a reasonable scale ([[hydroelectricity|pumped-storage hydro system]]s, batteries, future hydrogen [[fuel cell]]s, etc.). So, because of currently-expensive energy storage systems, a small stand-alone system is only economic in rare cases, or in applications where the connection to the global energy network would drive costs up sharply.
 
 
The geographic diversity of resources is also significant. Some countries and regions have significantly better resources than others in particular RE sectors. Some nations have significant resources at distance from the major population centers where electricity demand exists. Exploiting such resources on a large scale is likely to require considerable investment in transmission and distribution networks as well as in the technology itself.
 
 
===Transmission===
 
 
If renewable and [[distributed generation]] were to become widespread, [[electric power transmission]] and [[electricity distribution]] systems would no longer be the main distributors of electrical energy but would operate to balance the electricity needs of local communities. Those with surplus energy would sell to areas needing "top ups". That is, network operation would require a shift from 'passive management' - where generators are hooked up and the system is operated to get electricity 'downstream' to the consumer - to 'active management', wherein generators are spread across a network and inputs and outputs need to be constantly monitored to ensure proper balancing occurs within the system. Some Governments and regulators are moving to address this, though much remains to be done. One potential solution is the increased use of active management of electricity transmission and distribution networks. This will require significant changes in the way that such networks are operated.
 
 
However, on a small scale, use of renewable energy that can often be produced "on the spot" lowers the requirements [[electricity distribution]] systems have to fulfill. Current systems, while rarely economically efficient, have proven an average household with a solar panel array and energy storage system of the right size needs electricity from outside sources for only a few hours every week. Hence, advocates of renewable energy believe electricity distribution systems will become smaller and easier to manage, rather than the opposite.
 
 
==Renewable energy storage systems==
 
:''Main article: [[Grid energy storage]]''
 
 
One of the great problems with renewable energy, as mentioned above, is transporting it in time or space. Since most renewable energy sources are periodic, storage for off-generation times is important, and storage for powering transportation is also a critical issue. Various new technologies are being developed to solve this problem. The most well-known is a proposed future [[hydrogen economy]].
 
 
== Tonne of oil equivalent ==
 
A parameter used in renewable energy is the ''' tonne of [[oil]] equivalent (toe)'''. This is equal to 10,000 mega[[Calorie|cal]] (41,868 MJ).[http://www.iea.org/Textbase/stats/unit.asp]
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
Line 257: Line 257:
 
* [http://www.itdg.org/ Intermediate Technology Development Group]
 
* [http://www.itdg.org/ Intermediate Technology Development Group]
  
==References==
+
== References ==
  
 
*[http://eia.doe.gov/ U.S. Energy Information Administration] provides a wide range of statistics and information on the industry.
 
*[http://eia.doe.gov/ U.S. Energy Information Administration] provides a wide range of statistics and information on the industry.
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Revision as of 09:26, 25 April 2005

Renewable energy (sources) or RES capture their energy from existing flows of energy, from on-going natural processes, such as sunshine, wind, flowing water, biological processes, and geothermal heat flows. Neither fossil fuels nor nuclear power are considered to be renewable. For a discussion of this, please see the fossil fuels and nuclear energy sections in this article.

Most renewable forms of energy, other than geothermal and tidal power, ultimately come from the Sun. Some forms are stored solar energy such as rainfall and wind power which are considered short-term solar-energy storage, whereas the energy in biomass is accumulated over a period of months, as in straw, or through many years as in wood. Capturing renewable energy by plants, animals and humans does not permanently deplete the resource. Fossil fuels, while theoretically renewable on a very long time-scale, are exploited at rates that may deplete these resources in the near future (see: Hubbert peak).

Renewable energy resources may be used directly, or used to create other more convenient forms of energy. Examples of direct use are solar ovens, geothermal heating, and water- and windmills. Examples of indirect use which require energy harvesting are electricity generation through wind turbines or photovoltaic cells, or production of fuels such as ethanol from biomass (see alcohol as a fuel).

A parameter sometimes used in renewable energy is the tonne of oil equivalent (toe). This is equal to 10,000 megacal or 41,868 MJ of energy.[1]

For aspects of renewable energy use in modern societies see Renewable energy development.


Defining renewable

The concept of renewable energy was introduced in the 1970s as part of an effort to move beyond nuclear and fossil fuels. The most common definition is that renewable energy is from an energy resource that is replaced rapidly by a natural, ongoing process. Under this definition, neither fossil fuels nor nuclear power are renewable. Some, notably nuclear power and coal advocates, disagree with this definition, arguing that some renewable energy sources can have as great an impact on the environment as energy sources that don't technically meet this definition.


Yash does guys a lot!!!!!!!!

Modern sources of renewable energy

Solar energy

The solar panels (photovoltaic arrays) on this small yacht at sea can charge the 12 V batteries at up to 9 amperes in full, direct sunlight.

Main article: Solar power

Since most renewable energy is ultimately "solar energy" this term is slightly confusing and used in two different ways: firstly as a synonym for "renewable energies" as a whole and secondly for the energy that is directly collected from sunlight. In this section it is used in the latter category. Solar power can be used to:

Drawbacks

Obviously the sun does not provide constant energy to any spot on the Earth, so its use is limited. Solar cells are often used to power batteries, as most other applications would require a secondary energy source, to cope with outages.

Solar power is renewable.

Wind energy

Main article: Wind power

As the the sun heats up the Earth unevenly, winds are formed. The kinetic energy in the wind can be used to run wind turbines, some capable of producing 5 MW of power. The power output is a function of the cube of the wind speed, so such turbines generally require a wind in the range 5.5 m/s (20 km/h), and in practice relatively few land areas have significant prevailing winds. Luckily, offshore or at high altitudes, the winds are much more constant.

There are now many thousands of wind turbines operating in various parts of the world, with utility companies having a total capacity of over 47,317MW. New wind farms and offshore wind parks are being planned and built all over the world. This has been the most rapidly-growing means of electricity generation at the turn of the 21st century and provides a complement to large-scale base-load power stations. Most deployed turbines produce electricity about 25% of the time (load factor 25%), but some reach 35%. The load factor is generally higher is winter.

Drawbacks

There is resistance to the establishment of land based wind farms owing initially to perceptions they are noisy and contribute to "visual pollution," i.e., they are considered to be eyesores. Many people also claim that turbines kill birds, and that they in general do little for the environment.

Others have argued that they find the turbines beautiful, that turbines out at sea are invisible to anyone on the shore, that cars kill more birds annually and that turbines are continuing to evolve.

While the winds don't die down when the sun sets, they do die down, and thus cannot be relied upon the generate continuous power. Some calculations suggest that 1000MW of wind generated electricity can replace just 300MW of continuous power. While this might change as technology evolves, advocates have suggested using wind power to pump water into reservoirs (see water power in this article), or power industrial applications that don't depend on a continuous electricity supply, like electrolysis.

Wind power is renewable.

Geothermal energy

Main article: Geothermal energy

Geothermal energy ultimately comes from radioactive decay in the core of the Earth, which heats the Earth from the inside out, and from the sun, which heats the surface. It can be used in three ways:

  • Geothermal electricity
  • Geothermal heating, through deep Earth pipes
  • Geothermal heating, through a heat pump.

Usually, the term 'geothermal' is reserved for the thermal energy from the core of the Earth. Geothermal electricity is created by pumping a fluid (oil or water) into the Earth, allowing it to evaporate and using the hot gases vented from the earth's crust to run turbines linked to electrical generators.

The geothermal energy from the core of the Earth is closer to the surface in some areas than in others. Where hot underground steam or water can be tapped and brought to the surface it may be used to generate electricity. Such geothermal power sources exist in certain geologically unstable parts of the world such as Iceland, New Zealand, United States, the Philippines and Italy. The two most prominent areas for this in the United States are in the Yellowstone basin and in northern California. Iceland produced 170 MW geothermal power and heated 86% of all houses in the year 2000 through geothermal energy. Some 8000 MW of capacity is operational in total.

Geothermal heat from the surface of the Earth can be used on most of the globe directly to heat and cool buildings. The temperature of the crust a few feet below the surface is buffered to a constant 7-14C (45-58F), so a liquid can be pre-heated or pre-cooled in underground pipelines, providing free cooling in the summer and, via a heat pump, heating in the winter. Other direct uses are in agriculture (greenhouses), aquaculture and industry.

Drawbacks

Although geothermal sites are capable of providing heat for many decades, eventually specific locations cool down. Some interpret this as meaning a specific geothermal location can undergo depletion. Others see such an interpretation as an inaccurate usage of the word depletion because the overall supply of geothermal energy on Earth, and its source, remain nearly constant. Geothermal energy depends on local geological instability, which, by definition, is unpredictable, and might stabilise.

The general public considers geothermal energy to be renewable.

Water power

Main article: Water power

Energy in water can be harnessed and used, in the form of motive energy or temperature differences. Since water is about a thousand times heavier than air is, even a slow flowing stream of water can yield great amounts of energy.

There are many forms:

  • Hydroelectric energy, a term usually reserved for hydroelectric dams.
  • Tidal power, which captures energy from the tides in horizontal direction. Tides come in, raise waterlevels in a basin, and tides roll out. The water must pass through a turbine to get out of the basin.
  • Tidal stream power, which does the same vertically, capturing the stream of water as it is moved around the world by the tides.
  • Wave power, which uses the energy in waves. The waves will usually move large pontoons up and down.
  • Ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC), which uses the temperature difference between the warmer surface of the ocean and the cool (or cold) lower recesses. To this end, it employs a cyclic heat engine.
  • Deep lake water cooling, not technically an energy generation method, though it can save a lot of energy in summer. It uses submerged pipes as a heat sink for climate control systems. Lake-bottom water is a year-round local constant of about 4 °C.

Drawbacks

Hydroelectric power is probably not a major option for the future of energy production in the developed nations because most major sites within these nations with the potential for harnessing gravity in this way are either already being exploited or are unavailable for other reasons such as environmental considerations. Building a dam often involves flooding large areas of land, changing habitats, and while hydroelectric energy produces essentially no carbon dioxide, recent reports have linked hydroelectric power to methane, which forms out of decaying submerged plants which grow in the dried up parts of the basis in times of drought. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas.

The other methods of energy generation (and cooling) have had varying degrees of success in the field. Wave and tidal power prove hard to tap, while OTEC has not been field tested on a large scale.

The general public mostly considers water power energy to be renewable.

Biomass

Main article: Biofuel

Plants partly use photosynthesis to store solar energy, water and CO2. Biofuel is any fuel that derives from biomass - recently living organisms or their metabolic byproducts, such as manure from cows. It is a renewable energy.

Typically biofuel is burned to release its stored chemical energy. Research into more efficient methods of converting biofuels and other fuels into electricity utilizing fuel cells is an area of very active work. Biomass, also known as biomatter, can be used directly as fuel or to produce liquid biofuel. Agriculturally produced biomass fuels, such as biodiesel, ethanol and bagasse (often a by-product of sugar cane cultivation) can be burned in internal combustion engines or boilers.

Liquid biofuel

Liquid biofuel is usually bioalcohol such as methanol, ethanol and biodiesel. Biodiesel can be used in modern diesel vehicles with little or no modification and can be obtained from waste and crude vegetable and animal oil and fats (lipids). In some areas corn, sugarbeets, cane and grasses are grown specifically to produce ethanol (also known as alcohol) a liquid which can be used in internal combustion engines and fuel cells.

The EU plans to add 5% bioethanol to Europe's petrol by 2010. For the UK alone this would require 1.2 million hectares of arable land to be used exclusively for the production of bioethanol. Within its borders, the country only has 6.5 million hectares of arable land. Other, more efficient sources of biofuel, such as palm and soya oil, would probably have a significant negative environmental impact due to habitat damage in the areas in which they are grown.

Solid biomass

Direct use is usually in the form of combustible solids, either firewood or combustible field crops. Field crops may be grown specifically for combustion or may be used for other purposes, and the processed plant waste then used for combustion. Most sorts of biomatter, including dried manure, can actually be burnt to heat water and to drive turbines. Sugar cane residue, wheat chaff, corn cobs and other plant matter can be, and is, burnt quite successfully. The process releases no net CO2.

Solid biomass van also be gasified, and used as described in the next section.

Biogas

Main article: biogas

Many organic materials can release gases, due to metabolisation of organic matter by bacteria (fermentation. Landfills actually need to release this gas to prevent dangerous explosions. Animal feces releases methane under the influence of anaerobic bacteria.

Also, under high pressure, high temperature, anaerobic conditions many organic materials such as wood can be gasified to produce gas. This is often found to be more efficient than direct burning. The gas can then be used to generate electricity and/or heat.

Drawbacks

All biomass needs to go through some of these steps: it needs to be grown, collected, dried, fermented and burned. All of these steps require resources and an infrastructure.

Biomatter energy, under the right conditions, is considered to be renewable.


Small scale energy sources

There are many small scale energy sources that generally cannot be scaled up to industrial size. A short list:

  • Piezo electric crystals generate a small voltage whenever they are mechanically deformed. Vibration from engines can stimulate piezo electric crystals, as can the heels of shoes
  • Some watches are already powered by kinetics, in this case movement of the arm
  • Electrokinetics generate electricity from the kinetic energy in water that is pumped through tiny channels
  • Special antennae can collect energy from stray radio waves or theoretically even light (EM radiation).

Discussion of renewable energy

Aesthetics, habitat hazards and land use

Some people dislike the aesthetics of wind turbines or bring up nature conservation issues when it comes to large solar-electric installations outside of cities. Some people try to utilize these renewable technologies in an efficient and aesthetically pleasing way: fixed solar collectors can double as noise barriers along highways, roof-tops are available already and could even be replaced totally by solar collectors, amorphous photovoltaic cells can be used to tint windows and produce energy etc.

Some renewable energy capture systems entail unique environmental problems. For instance, wind turbines can be hazardous to flying birds, while hydroelectric dams can create barriers for migrating fish - a serious problem in the Pacific Northwest that has decimated the numbers of many salmon populations. Burning biomass and biofuels causes air pollution similar to that of burning fossil fuels.

Another problem with many renewables, especially biomass and biofuels, is the large amount of land required, which otherwise could be left as wilderness.

Availability

Another inherent difficulty with renewables is their variable and diffuse nature (the exception being geothermal energy, which is however only accessible in exceptional locations). Since renewable energy sources are providing relatively low-intensity energy, the new kinds of "power plants" needed to convert the sources into usable energy need to be distributed over large areas.

To illustrate, note that production of 1000 kWh of electricity per year (a typical per-year-per-capita consumption of electricity in Western countries), in cloudy Europe would require about eight square meters of solar panels (assuming a below-average solar conversion rate of 12.5%). Systematic electrical generation requires reliable overlapping sources or some means of storage on a reasonable scale (pumped-storage hydro systems, batteries, future hydrogen fuel cells, etc). So, because of currently-expensive energy storage systems, a small stand-alone system is only economic in rare cases, or in applications where the connection to the global energy network would drive costs up sharply.

The geographic diversity of resources is also significant. Some countries and regions have significantly better resources than others in particular RE sectors. Some nations have significant resources at distance from the major population centers where electricity demand exists. Exploiting such resources on a large scale is likely to require considerable investment in transmission and distribution networks as well as in the technology itself.

Comparison

Renewable energy sources are fundamentally different from fossil fuel or nuclear power plants because the Sun will 'power' these 'power plants' (meaning sunlight, the wind, flowing water, etc.) for the next 4 billion years. They also do not directly produce greenhouse gases and other emissions, as fossil fuel combustion does. Most do not introduce any global new risks such as nuclear waste.

Nuclear energy

Main article: Nuclear power

Nuclear energy is not considered a renewable energy, but is often compared and contrasted with renewables in the context of future energy development.

Nuclear energy comes from fission. In physics, fission is when the nucleus splits into two or more smaller nuclei plus some by-products. Fission releases substantial amounts of energy (the strong nuclear force binding energy).

When the term renewable was introduced (see defining renewable within this article), it was a generally held belief that the Earth's sources of nuclear material would be depleted within some fifty years. Since then, the breeder reactor was invented. By using breeder reactors, which transform materials that are not generally fissile (such as most isotopes of uranium into easily fissile material, such as plutonium and by harvesting nuclear material from mines, seawater and granite, we could theoretically continue to use nuclear power for billions of years, as calculated by Bernard Cohen [2]. However, these calculations have been proven to be faulty. For example, they don't take the natural decay of uranium into account. Moreover, they ignore rising electricity demands. They also ignore alternate fissile materials such as thorium. It is currently impossible to say how much fissile material will be available in the future, or how long it will last when used.

Drawbacks

Nuclear fission, the common form of nuclear energy production, releases radiation and large amounts of radioactive material, which most scientists agree must be contained for thousands of years. During this time, the material could leak into the environment and cause devastation to ecosystems.

Controversy

Nuclear power is not considered to be renewable, because nuclear power plants actually generate energy; they do not tap into an existing flow of energy, but rather contain fissile materials in a reactor and force them to decay, releasing energy in the form of radiation and heat, which is used to generate electricity. Nuclear power generates radioactive waste, which needs to be safely stored. Finding a site that will remain safe for several thousands of years isn't easy. In the U.S., a proposal to store the nation's nuclear waste under Yucca Mountain in Nevada has generated controversy.

Nuclear power is a limited power. Using fissile materials means depleting them, while renewable energy sources such as the wind can in realistic terms be tapped indefinitely, by any number of turbines. Increasing energy output through wind turbines would involve erecting additional wind turbines, while increasing energy output through nuclear power brings the moment of depletion closer.

The amount of uranium in the seas is currently being replenished by rivers through erosion of underground resources at a rate of 32,000 tonnes per year[3]. This could supply about 25 times the current world demand for electricity for billions of years.

Some critics of nuclear energy argue that nuclear energy could lead to the proliferation of nuclear weapons technology, since some nuclear reactors create the materials necessary for these weapons. While it's true that breeder reactors generate large amounts of plutonium for use in nuclear reactors, plutonium is a base component of nuclear fission bombs.

Fossil fuels

Main article: Fossil fuel

Fossil fuels are not considered a renewable energy source, but are often compared and contrasted with renewables in the context of future energy development.

Fossil fuels are generally thought to be the altered remnants of ancient plant and animal life deposited in sedimentary rocks. They were formed millions of years ago during the Davonian period, and have rested underground, mostly dormant, since that time.

Controversy

The coal industry in the US is publicly claiming coal is renewable energy because the coal was originally biomass. However, the biomass of fossil fuels was produced on the time scale of millions of years through a series of events and it is considered to be a deposit of energy, not an energy flow. Some scientist hold the view that the formation of fossil fuels was a one-time event, made possible by unique conditions during the Devonian period, such as increased oxygen levels and huge swamps.

When the term renewable was introduced (see Defining renewable within this article), it was a generally held belief that the Earth's sources would be depleted within some fifty years. Since then, large deposits of deep-Earth oil have been found, which upset the timetable, there is no denying that eventually Earth will run out of fossil fuels. (See peak oil).

Transmission

Distributed generation

If renewable and distributed generation were to become widespread, electric power transmission and electricity distribution systems might no longer be the main distributors of electrical energy but would operate to balance the electricity needs of local communities. Those with surplus energy would sell to areas needing "top ups". That is, network operation would require a shift from 'passive management' - where generators are hooked up and the system is operated to get electricity 'downstream' to the consumer - to 'active management', wherein generators are spread across a network and inputs and outputs need to be constantly monitored to ensure proper balancing occurs within the system. Some Governments and regulators are moving to address this, though much remains to be done. One potential solution is the increased use of active management of electricity transmission and distribution networks. This will require significant changes in the way that such networks are operated.

However, on a small scale, use of renewable energy that can often be produced "on the spot" lowers the requirements electricity distribution systems have to fulfill. Current systems, while rarely economically efficient, have proven an average household with a solar panel array and energy storage system of the right size needs electricity from outside sources for only a few hours every week. Hence, advocates of renewable energy believe electricity distribution systems will become smaller and easier to manage, rather than the opposite.

Energy storage

See also: Grid energy storage and the section on energy storage in Energy development.

Historical usage of (renewable) energy

In times when fossil fuels and nuclear power where not available, only renewable energy sources were used (though one might argue that clear cutting to provide firewood is hardly sustainable).

Wood

Wood was the earliest manipulated energy source in human history, being used as a thermal energy source through burning, and it is still important in this context today. Burning wood was important for both cooking and providing heat, enabling human presence in cold climates. Special types of wood cooking, food dehydration and smoke curing, also enabled human societies to safely store perishable foodstuffs through the year. Eventually, it was discovered that partial combustion in the relative absence of oxygen could produce charcoal, which provided a hotter and more compact and portable energy source. However, this was not a more efficient energy source, because it required a large input in wood to create the charcoal.

Animal traction

Motive power for vehicles and mechanical devices was originally produced through animal traction. Animals such as horses and oxen not only provided transportation but also powered mills. Animals are still extensively in use in many parts of the world for these purposes.

Water power

Animal power for mills was eventually supplanted by water power, the power of falling water in rivers, wherever it was exploitable. Direct use of water power for mechanical purposes is today fairly uncommon, but still in use. Originally, water power through hydroelectricity was the most important source of electrical generation throughout society, and is still an important source today. Throughout most of the history of human technology, hydroelectricity has been the only renewable source of electricity generation significantly tapped for the generation of electricity.

Wind power

Wind power has been used for several hundred years. It was originally used via large sail-blade windmills with slow-moving blades, such as those seen in the Netherlands and mentioned in Don Quixote. These large mills usually either pumped water or powered small mills. Newer windmills featured smaller, faster-turning, more compact units with more blades, such as those seen throughout the Great Plains. These were mostly used for pumping water from wells. Recent years have seen the rapid development of wind generation farms by mainstream power companies, using a new generation of large, high wind turbines with two or three immense and relatively slow-moving blades.

Solar power

Solar power as a direct energy source has been not been captured by mechanical systems until recent human history, but was captured as an energy source through architecture in certain societies for many centuries. Not until the twentieth century was direct solar input extensively explored via more carefully planned architecture (passive solar) or via heat capture in mechanical systems (active solar) or electrical conversion (photovoltaic). Increasingly today the sun is harnessed for heat and electricity.


See also

External links

References

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