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Alternative Energy Viability in the United States

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Title: Alternative Energy Viability in the United States


1
Alternative Energy Viability in the United States
  • By Gareth Collins
  • Molly Conlon
  • Tim Peters

2
Table of Contents
  • Hypothesis / Intro
  • Alternative Energy Types
  • Environmental Impacts
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography

3
Hypothesis
  • If the United States adopts efficient modes of
    alternative energy use, we can mitigate the
    global rise in Carbon Dioxide emissions and
    environmental hazards.

4
Introduction
  • The bulk of our research is focused on three
    viable forms of energy that will effectively
    reduce carbon emissions in the United States
    Nuclear, Wind, Biomass

5
Background Information
  • Major sources of energy in the United States
    include and their effects on the environment
  • Coal (51)
  • Nuclear (20)
  • Natural Gas (17)
  • Hydro (7)
  • Petroleum (3)
  • Renewables/other (2)

6
Fossil Fuels Coal, Petroleum, Natural Gas
  • Advantages
  • Good availability presently
  • Simple combustion
  • Inexpensive
  • Easily distributed
  • Disadvantages
  • Contributor to global warming
  • Exhaustible fuel source
  • Cause of acid rain

7
Nuclear Energy
  • Advantages
  • Same cost as coal
  • No pollution
  • Small amount of fuel needed for large amount of
    energy production
  • Small amount of waste
  • Reliable
  • Disadvantages
  • Very dangerous
  • Money must be spent on safety

8
Nuclear Fission
  • Currently 103 operational reactors in U.S.
  • Does not produce smoke or carbon dioxide, so it
    does not contribute to the greenhouse effect.
  • Offsets 700 million metric tons of CO2 per year
    in the U.S. (2 billion worldwide).

9
(No Transcript)
10
Biomass Energy
  • Advantages
  • Inexhaustible
  • Minimal environmental impact
  • Globally available
  • Disadvantages
  • Could contribute to increased CO2 emissions if
    burned directly
  • Expensive source

11
Biomass
  • Pure ethanol is used in approximately 40 of the
    cars in Brazil.
  • Brazil consumes nearly 4 billion gallons of
    ethanol annually.
  • Adapting cars to pure ethanol is relatively
    inexpensive.

12
Ethanol Production Process
13
Wind Energy
  • Advantages
  • Inexhaustible
  • No pollution
  • Disadvantages
  • Disperse source (low energy production)
  • Geographically dependent
  • Expensive to maintain

14
Wind Energy
  • Wind energy is the cheapest form of alternative
    energy.
  • With reasonably aggressive expansion of wind
    power, the Midwest United States could easily
    supply 5-10 of its power needs with wind
    generators.

15
-The darker areas indicate higher amount of
natural wind energy.
16
Environmental Impacts
  • Tropical storms have become more powerful with
    increased global temperatures.
  • Climate may cause species to migrate out of
    protected areas.
  • Higher temperatures increase disease and invasive
    species.

17
Stella Models
  • Global carbon emissions if the U.S. maintains its
    current level of carbon emissions.
  • Global carbon emission if the U.S. reduces its
    carbon emission by 50 over 100 years.

18
Conclusions
  • Alternative energy is increasingly viable and
    necessary.
  • Large scale change in the US will yield modest
    results in the global climate picture, and will
    set a precedent for further global change.
  • Significant environmental impacts can be
    mitigated by human action.

19
Take-Home Message
  • The United States, as the worlds leading Carbon
    Dioxide emitter, has a responsibility to embrace
    alternative energy.
  • We are already feeling the effects of climate
    change, the time to act is now.

20
Bibliography
  • Mynick, H. E., D. O. Hall, and R. H. Williams.
    "Cooling the Greenhouse with Bioenergy." Nature
    353 (1991). 21 Nov. 2006 /energy/publications/pdf/1991/Williams_91_Cooling
    _the_Greenhouse.pdf
  • Emanuel, Kerry. 2005. Increasing destructiveness
    of tropical cyclones over the last 30 years.
    Nature, 436 686-688.
  • Loiter, Jeffrey M. Technology Policy and
    Renewable Energy Public Roles in the Development
    of New Technologies. Energy Policy 27 (1999)
    85-97.
  • Soholt, Beth. Wind Power Development Progress
    and Challenges. (2005)Search Tools. U of
    Michigan Lib., Ann Arbor. 23 Oct. 2006.
    http//searchtools.lib.umich.edu

21
Bibliography Continued
  • "Wind Energy Resource Atlas of the United
    States." 3 Dec. 2006 ubs/atlas/maps/chap2/2-01m.html.
  • "The Economics of Nuclear Power." Uranium
    Information Centre. Nov. 2006. 1 Dec. 2006
    .
  • "Environment Emissions Prevented." Nuclear
    Energy Institute. 1 Dec. 2006 index.asp?catnum2catid346.
  • "BIOMASS ETHANOL Technical Progress,
    Opportunities, and Commercial Chal." Annual
    Review of Energy and the Environment 24 (1999)
    189-226. 21 Nov. 2006 iews.org/doi/full/10.1146/annurev.energy.24.1.189?
    cookieSet1.
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