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Renewable energy sources

Renewable energy sources. Nowadays and predictions for the future. In the last 10 years , the Earth warmed up by 1C. Why can’t we notice the change ?.

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Renewable energy sources

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  1. Renewableenergy sources Nowadays and predictions for thefuture

  2. In thelast 10 years, theEarthwarmedup by 1C

  3. Whycan’t we noticethechange? The answer, according to a new paper in GeophysicalResearchLetters, is that a lot of it is being stored in the deep ocean, more than a half-mile down. “We normally think about global warming as what we experience on the Earth's surface,” said co-author Kevin Trenberth, in an interview. If extra heat is temporarily stored elsewhere thanks to natural climate variations, we won't necessarily notice it. 

  4. Consumption of energy till2020

  5. Solar, wind and water We don’tknowhow to storeelectrical energy on a massivescale.

  6. Michael Levi: Three Reasons Solar Will Succeed • Solar can take advantage of improvements in materials, computing and nanotechnology in ways other technologies can't do nearly as effectively. Solar also has a host of initial niches it can grow in, from rooftop generation in places like California, to off-grid and micro-grid energy in often-sunny developing countries that lack good infrastructure. Solar is also a much better match for our energy demand than wind is. Solar power peaks when it's hot—exactly when people want to crank up their air conditioners. Wind power peaks in the middle of the night when people are using a lot less power.

  7. Howsolarworks

  8. Powering devices withsolar energy

  9. Examples of gatheringwater energy • A hydroelectric dam captures energy from the movement of a river. Dam operators control the flow of water and the amount of electricity produced. Dams create reservoirs (large bodies of calm water) behind them, which can be used for recreation, wildlife sanctuaries, and sources of drinking water. • Wave power captures energy from waves on the surface of the ocean using a special buoy or other floating device. • Tidal power captures the energy of flowing waters with the help of turbines as tides rush in and out of coastal areas.

  10. Dam and generator collectwater energy

  11. Wind energy • Stand-alone wind turbines are typically used for water pumping or communications. However, homeowners, farmers, and ranchers in windy areas can also use wind turbines as a way to cut their electric bills.

  12. Is a wind turbineloud?

  13. HeatfromtheEarth. • Geothermal energy is the heat from the Earth. It's clean and sustainable. Resources of geothermal energy range from the shallow ground to hot water and hot rock found a few miles beneath the Earth's surface, and down even deeper to the extremely high temperatures of molten rock called magma.

  14. Heating a homewithgeothermal energy.

  15. Geothermalindetail

  16. Solar Advantages: Energy isfreealthoughthereis a cost of buildingcollectors, does not causepollution, can be usedinremoteareas, canpowerlow energy consuming devices, itisinfinite Disadvantages: Can be gatheredonlyduring sunny days, collectorsareexpensive, relies on climate, itishard to storesolar energy, batteriesare heavy.

  17. Water Pros • Provides water for 30-30% of the world’s irrigated land • Provides 19% of electricity • Expands irrigation • Provides drinking water • Supplies hydroelectric energy (falling water used to run turbines) • Easier for third world countries to generate power (if water source is available) • It is cheaper Cons • Destabilizes marine ecosystems • Water wars (up river and down river; e.g., the water war between Georgia, Alabama, and Florida is ongoing) • Dam building is very costly • People have to relocate • Some dams have to be torn down (Some older ones are not stable.) • Restricted to areas with flowing water • Pollution affects water power • Flooding of available land that could be used for agriculture

  18. Wind Advantages • Continuous sources of energy • Clean source of energy • No emissions into the atmosphere • Does not add to thermal burden of the earth • Produces no health-damaging air pollution or acid rain • Land can be sued to produce energy and grow crops simultaneously • Economical • Benefits local communities (jobs, revenue) Disadvantages • For most locations, wind power density is low • Wind velocity must be greater than 7 mph to be usable in most areas • Problem exists in variation of power density and duration (not reliable) • Need better ways to store energy • Land consumption

  19. Geothermal • Advantages • SignificantCostSaving • Reduce reliance on fossilfuels • No pollution • Directuse • Job creation/ economicbenefits • Disadvantages • Not widespread • High costs • Can run out of steam • Suited to particular region • May releaseharmfulgases • transportation

  20. Potential Sources of Energy when Fossil Fuels Run Out NUCLEAR FUSION Magnetic Plasma Confinement, Inertial Fusion NUCLEAR FISSION Waste & NuclearProliferation

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