Renewable Energy Resource - An Essentially

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RENEWABLE ENERGY

Renewable Energy
Resource - An essentially
inexhaustible energy
resource on a human time
scale.
PASSIVE SOLAR HEATING
Passive solar heating – captures sunlight directly with a
structure and converts it to low-temperature heat for space heating.
 
Advantages Disadvantages
1. save money 1. expensive for initial costs
2. create 2-5 more jobs/unit of electricity 2. aesthetically not pleasing
3. eliminate/reduce fossil fuels 3. latitude
4. less pollution
5. less environmental damage
PASSIVE SOLAR HEATING
ACTIVE SOLAR HEATING
Active solar heating – specially designed collectors absorb solar energy and
fan/pump distributes energy to parts of a building to meet space/water heating
needs.
  
Advantages Disadvantages
1. save money 1. expensive for initial costs
2. create 2-5 more jobs/unit of electricity 2. aesthetically not pleasing
3. eliminate/reduce fossil fuels 3. latitude
4. less pollution
5. less environmental damage
 
ACTIVE SOLAR HEATING
SOLAR POWER TOWER
    Solar Power Tower –huge arrays of computer controlled mirrors that
track the sun and focus sunlight on a central heat collection tower.
(Mojave desert in California)
 
Advantages Disadvantages
Cost will drop as Costs 8X more to
Technology improves build
SOLAR POWER TOWER
SOLAR THERMAL PLANT

1Solar Thermal Plant – sunlight is collected and focused on oil-filled pipes


that run through the middle of curved solar collectors.
 
Advantages Disadvantages
 1.     Can generate temperatures high 1. central receivers are
enough for industrial processes expensive to operate.
2. can supply back-up electricity
3. cheaper than nuclear
SOLAR THERMAL PLANT
SOLAR COOKER
1Solar Cooker – focuses and concentrates sunlight in a box typically covered in
glass to trap infrared radiation waves to cook food in rural villages in developing
countries.
 
Advantages Disadvantages
Does not reduce deforestation 2-4 hours to cook average meal.

 
SOLAR COOKER
SOLAR HYDROGEN
Solar-Hydrogen – Water can be split into gaseous hydrogen and oxygen.
It is in its infancy. So far… we can create fuel cells where hydrogen and oxygen
combine to produce an electrical current, but it is difficult to store enough hydrogen
gas in a fuel tank for very long.
Politics and economics are “holding up” this technology.
R&D from government needed.
must convince energy companies and investors to $ into this type of power and
phase out fossil fuels.
must convince public to change over.
 

…Not Yet!
SOLAR HYDROGEN
HYDROPOWER
1.     Hydroelectric power plants – A dam is built across a large river to create a
reservoir. The higher the head, the greater the amount of power that can be
generated. Water is stored in a reservoir during low electricity production. Water
is released and flows are controlled as electricity demands peak. Water spins the
turbines in the “powerhouse”. Electricity is distributed to end user. 
Examples – Aswan High Dam (Egypt) and Colorado River Basin (USA/Mexico)
 Advantages Disadvantages
1. Moderate to high energy yield 1. create floods
2. low operating/maintenance costs 2. destroys habitats
3. low air pollution 3. uproots people
4. 2-10 times longer life than othe 4. 2-10 x longer lifespan than other
4. pesticides/algicides used
5.     Power sources 5. Decreases fish harvests
HYDROPOWER

Hoover
Dam
HYDROPOWER

Aswan
High
Dam
TIDAL POWER

1Tidal Power- power created from tidal energy


 
Advantages Disadvantages
1. tidal energy spins turbines 1. few suitable sites
2. Construction costs high

 
TIDAL POWER
BIOMASS
Biomass – organic matter in plants produced through photosynthesis and can be burned
directly as a solid fuel or converted into a gas or liquid fuel.
1.     Burning wood
2.     Agricultural Waste
a.     Bagasse (sugar cane residue)
b.    Straw
3.     Urban Waste (WTE)
a. burning garbage
4.     Biofuels
a.     Biogas – a mixture of 60% methane and 40% carbon dioxide.
b.    Liquid ethanol- (grain alcohol) – sugar + grain; mix gasoline + ethanol = gasohol
which can burned in conventional gasoline engines (super-unleaded)
BIOMASS
BAGASSE
WOOD

GARBAGE
SUGAR CANE
BIOGAS
BIOMASS
Advantages Disadvantages
1. potentially renewable resource 1. removal of trees depletes
soil nutrients
2. less air pollutants released 2. soil erosion (turbidity)
3. decrease in use of fossil fuels 3. flooding
4. moderate-high net energy yield 4. loss of wildlife habitats
5. large land areas needed
6. heavy pesticide/fertilizer use
7. reduces biodiversity
8. reduces ecological integrity
GEOTHERMAL
Geothermal Energy - Heat contained in underground rocks and
fluid that can be tapped for energy.
Extract dry steam, wet steam or hot water and can be used to heat
space or water.
“Potentially renewable resource”
22 countries currently use geothermal, it supplies 1% of world
energy. In the USA (44% geothermal energy produced worldwide)
geothermal electricity is produced mostly in Hawaii, California,
Nevada, and Utah.
GEOTHERMAL
Advantages Disadvantages
1. Reliable 1. Scarcity of reservoirs
2. Renewable 2. Deforestation to
3. Moderate Net Energy Yield build plants
4. 96% less CO2 emitted 3. Land subsidence
5. Competitive Cost 4. Noise, odor
GEOTHERMAL
SOLUTIONS FOR
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY
Improve energy efficiency
Increase local availability of renewable energy resources
Find transitional resources (natural gas, nuclear)
Government must promote R&D for alternative renewable energy resources.
Educate the public
All energy resources should compete in an open, free-market with NO government
control!
Government needs to implement constructive subsidies not destructive subsidies
to promote change, this will lead to conservation of resources and less over-
consumption.

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