Title: Hydropower
1Hydropower
2What Can This Type of Energy Be Used For?
- Generates / Produces Electricity.
3What is the Renewability of this Type of
Energy/Resource?
- Water is a Renewable source, however the amount
of water is being reduced at a dangerous rate by
human activity. - If the hydropower plants could be used near the
oceans and used saltwater as well as freshwater
more energy would be able to be produced for a
longer amount of time.
4What is the Cost of Using this Type of
Energy/Resource?
- The Average cost of building a hydropower plant
is 2,000 per Kilowatt. - The average size of a plant is 125 KW.
- Concluding that the average cost would be around
250,000. - However, hydropower costs as little as one-tenth
of the cost of a photovoltaic (solar-power)
system that is producing the same amount of
energy. - Hydropower is the most efficient way to produce
energy and can convert as much as 90 into
electricity where as fossil fuels are only 50
efficient.
5What are the positive aspects of using this
resource/type of energy?
- Hydropower is almost free due to the averaging
out of the amount of energy received with the
cost of building the plant. - Produces virtually no waste and little pollution.
6What are the negative aspects of using this
resource/type of energy?
- Hydropower, however, can alter the surrounding
environment. For example, the impact on the
migration of fish. - Also, there is an impact on water quality and
flow. This is due to the fact that the hydropower
plants cause low dissolved oxygen levels in the
water.
7When is the energy/resource expected to be easily
accessible to the general public?
- Hydropower has been available in the United
States since 1880. - It has been a popular form of energy-generation
for the past century.
8Where is it currently being used (both US and
worldwide) and to what degree?
- Projects are being planned in China, New Zealand,
South Korea, India (7400 kw), Britain (8,600),
Russia (10,000).
9How does this energy/resource affect carbon
emissions, carbon sources, carbon sinks, and
climate function?
- Due to the fact that hydropower must have
reservoirs, some greenhouse gases come from the
reservoirs. However, the greenhouse gases that
are produced represent the gases already apparent
in the carbon cycle.
10Where Plants Are Located.
11Parts of A Hydropower Plant.
- Dam. Raises the water level of the river to
create falling water. Also controls the flow of
water. The reservoir that is formed is, in
effect, stored energy. - Turbine. The force of falling water pushing
against the turbine's blades causes the turbine
to spin. A water turbine is much like a windmill,
except the energy is provided by falling water
instead of wind. The turbine converts the kinetic
energy of falling water into mechanical energy. - Generator. Connected to the turbine by shafts and
possibly gears so when the turbine spins it
causes the generator to spin also. Converts the
mechanical energy from the turbine into electric
energy. Generators in hydropower plants work just
like the generators in other types of power
plants. - Transmission lines. Conduct electricity from the
hydropower plant to homes and business.
12How A Hydropower Plant Works.
13Hydropower in the United States.
14Facts
- Hydropower accounts for 6 of the total US
electricity generation and 71 of generation from
renewables in 2007 - Its one of the oldest sources of energy
- Worldwide, about 20 of electricity is generated
by hydropower - US is the 2nd largest producer (Canada is the
1st) - Hydropower does not produce GHGs or other types
of air pollution - It prevents the burning of 22 billion gallons of
oil, or 120 million tons of coal each year
15Sources
- Miller Lite
- Plan B 3.0
- www.Wikipedia.com
- www.niwa.cri.nz/pubs/wa/ma/13-4/hydropower
- www.wvic.com/hydro-works.htm
- www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/renewable
/water.html