Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Clean Energies: Ramon S English Class
Clean Energies: Ramon S English Class
CLEAN ENERGIES
Definition of energy.
Scientists define energy as the ability to do work. What that means is that
humans have found ways to change one form of energy to another to work for us.
Energy exists in many different forms. Examples of these are: light energy, heat
energy, mechanical energy, gravitational energy, electrical energy, sound energy,
chemical energy, nuclear or atomic energy and so on. These forms of energy can be
transferred and transformed between one another. This is of immense benefit to us. For
example, we change wood into heat when we burn it.
History of energy.
Wood, a biomass, was the first source of energy. Can’t you just picture the cave
dwellers around their fires, cooking their food and keeping warm? We still do that when
we go camping.
The massive use of oil and natural gas didn’t start until the late 1800s and early
1900s when large reserves were discovered. This high energy fuel led to the invention
of the first cars.
Up until the mid-1900s, no one appeared concerned that the world would run out
of these energy sources. Until in 1949, a scientist, predicted that the fossil fuel era
would be very short-lived. The industrial world began to realize we would soon have to
rely on other energy sources.
By this time, almost all industry was using oil, coal and natural gas. The cost of
changing the systems to alternative energy sources was way too expensive, so they just
kept on doing what they have been doing for a couple of hundred years.
Nuclear power has a long and controversial history. Most people think of the
nuclear bomb, not the useful energy it produces. Most nuclear power plants are powered
by uranium, which is in short supply. A big problem with these power plants, is how to
get rid of the waste generated by the plants. The radioactive wastes could take at least
10,000 years to break down into harmless elements. Most people don’t want that kind of
dangerous stuff stored or buried near them.
Global warming
Global warming is a slow but steady rise in Earth's surface temperature. Temperatures
today are 0.74 °C (1.33 °F) higher than 150 years ago. Some people think that the
warming is because of people burning fossil fuels like coal and oil. Some also think that
humans are cutting down too many of the earth's forests, a process known as
deforestation. Most major governments and science groups agree with these ideas.
If the earth's temperature becomes hotter the sea level will also become higher. This is
partly because water expands when it gets warmer. It is also partly because warm
temperatures make glaciers melt. The sea level rise may cause coastal areas to flood.
Weather patterns, including where and how much rain or snow there is, will
change. Deserts will probably increase in size. Colder areas will warm up faster than
warm areas. Strong storms may become more likely and farming may not make as much
food. These effects will not be the same everywhere. The changes from one area to
another are not well known.
People in government have talked about global warming. They do not agree on what to
do about it. Some things that could reduce warming are to burn less fossil fuels, adapt to
any temperature changes, or try to change the Earth to reduce warming. The Kyoto
Protocol tries to reduce pollution from the burning of fossil fuels.
Most governments have agreed to it. Some people in government think nothing should
change.
At present only a small proportion of the world's energy needs come from alternative
and renewable energy sources. These exist in many forms including Solar Thermal,
Photovoltaics, Wind, Hydro, Tidal/Wave and Bioenergy (including Biomass, Biogas
and Biofuels). As with fossil fuels the sun's energy is the ultimate source of these
energies.
The Advantages of Renewable Energy
One major advantage with the use of renewable energy is that as it is renewable
it is therefore sustainable and so will never run out.
Renewable energy projects can also bring economic benefits to many regional
areas, as most projects are located away from large urban centres and suburbs of the
capital cities. These economic benefits may be from the increased use of local services
as well as tourism.
The sun's light energy can be converted directly into electricity in a single
process using Photovoltaic (PV) cells, otherwise known as solar cells. A PV cell is a
thin plate of light sensitive material made primarily of silicon, the second most abundant
element in the earth 's crust, and the same semiconductor material used for computers.
When the silicon is combined with one or more other materials, it exhibits
unique electrical properties in the presence of sunlight. Electrons are excited by the light
and move through the silicon. This is known as the photovoltaic effect and results in
direct current (DC) electricity.
Many PV cells are linked together to create a standard PV module, which in turn
are linked together into a PV array. PV modules have no moving parts, are virtually
maintenance-free although they should be kept clean and clear of shading, and have a
working life of 20 -30 years.
Like old fashioned windmills, today’s wind machines (also called wind turbines)
use blades to collect the wind’s kinetic energy. The wind flows over the blades creating
lift, like the effect on airplane wings, which causes them to turn. The blades are
connected to a drive shaft that turns an electric generator to produce electricity.
With the new wind machines, there is still the problem of what to do when the
wind isn't blowing. At those times, other types of power plants must be used to make
electricity
HYDROELECTRIC POWER