Unit 1 The Energy Producing Sources
Unit 1 The Energy Producing Sources
Unit 1 The Energy Producing Sources
Unit 1 Chapter 1
Energy Sources
Non-Renewable Resources
Once coal is extracted from the subsurface, it is processed to remove any impurities.
Trucks, trains and boat are used to transport the coal. Coal is mostly used as a fuel for thermal power plants, it is also used as a raw material to make cast iron and steel.
Renewable Resources
Burning waste for fuel saves money because it prevents waste from being buried and prevents soil and ground water from being contaminated
Inexhaustible Resources
As it is not always sunny it is difficult to store the electricity produced, a backup energy source is needed to ensure a constant supply of energy.
Solar energy is non-polluting and can be used directly for heating and lighting or indirectly when it is converted into electricity. This is an expensive way of producing energy although the source of energy is free!!
Conclusion
Thanks to the development of new, more reliable and less costly technologies, it is expected that the cost of producing electricity from renewable and inexhaustible resources will decrease in the coming years. On the other hand, the cost of hydroelectricity is not likely to go down, because it is an energy source whose technology is already highly advanced. The development of inexhaustible, renewable resources must increase in order to ensure sustainable development.
A Global Context
In this chapter, you will see that energy resources are unequally distributed throughout the Earth, which gives rise to a great deal of trade among countries. Population growth and an expanding global economy have resulted in ever-rising consumption of different forms of energy.
Energy consumption per capita varies according to the economic level of development and technological developments
The main factors explaining the significant increase are rapid economic growth and industrial development, sharp growth in the number of automobiles, urbanization and the replacement of traditional fuels
Energy Production
Energy Production
Energy resources are unequally distributed over the surface of the Earth. This fact partially explains why some countries produce more energy than others Energy production also varies according to the energy needs of a country. Therefore, developing countries usually produce less energy than industrialized countries, because their per capita energy consumption is lower. Some countries consume all the energy they produce, whereas others export part of it.
Coal-Producing Countries
Hydroelectricity-Producing Countries
Inequalities in the global distribution of energy resources and in standards of living have put some countries at a high level of energy dependence than others.
A country can even have different dependence levels for each of the energy sources it uses. Ex. The U.S. consumes more energy than it produces. Although they are autonomous with coal production, they must import oil and natural gas.
Every year, nearly 4000 oil tankers transport about 1.9 billion tonnes of oil over the ocean which represents 62% of world production. The rest o the oil is transported over land using oil pipelines.