Title: Chapter 17: non-renewable energy
1Chapter 17 non-renewable energy
- Energy Use and Consumption Unit
2Crude Oil
- Location (world) Middle East (OPEC 78) The
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
3Crude Oil
- Location (US) Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Coast (3 of
world reserves)
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5Crude Oil
- So how long do we think it will last?
- US reserves 10-48 years.
- World reserves 42-93 years
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8Crude Oil
- Advantages Abundant, convenient, cheap
- Disadvantages Dependant on foreign oil, running
out, emissions, pollution, at current rate, we
will run out in 53 years!
9Crude Oil
- Conventional oil/light oil what we use pumped
from ground - Heavy crude oil Oil that is difficult to pump
out currently not recovered - Oil sand (tar sand) mixture of clay, sand, water
and bitumen. Could be used, but has high sulfur
content - Shale oil can be extracted from oil shale rock.
Low quality oil
10Natural Gas
- Location (world) Russia (31), Middle East (36)
11Natural Gas
- Location (US) (3) Gulf coast, above crude oil
12Natural Gas
- So how long do we think it will last?
- US reserves 55-80 years
- World Reserves 62-125 years
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14Natural Gas
- Advantages Can be transported easily, lower
pollution than other fossil fuels, high energy
yield - Disadvantages running out, greenhouse gas
released, explosive - (especially in liquid form)
15Natural Gas
- LPG liquefied petroleum gas (LP). For rural
areas where natural gas lines arent run. Propane
and Butane mixed.
16Coal
- Location (world) China, Russia
17Coal
- Location (US) (25 of world supply) Eastern
areas of US Montana, Utah, Arizona and southern
areas of midwest
18Coal
- So how long do we think it will last?
- US Reserves 300 at current rates (64 years with
4 increase) - World Reserves400 years if new reserves are
found and current rate of usage
19Coal
- Advantages most abundant fossil fuel, high
energy, US has large supply - Disadvantages health concerns, high pollution
when burned, high in sulfur, releases mercury
20Coal
21Coal
- Can be converted into synthetic natural gas
(SNG), but the process releases more CO2 than
burning coal does. - Low quality coal is often burnt with high
emissions mercury, sulfur, CO2 - Different types of coal Lignite, Bituminous,
Anthracite, Peat
22Coal Types
Increasing heat and carbon content
Increasing moisture content
Peat (not a coal)
Lignite (brown coal)
Bituminous Coal (soft coal)
Anthracite (hard coal)
Heat
Heat
Heat
Pressure
Pressure
Pressure
Partially decayed plant matter in swamps and
bogs low heat content
Low heat content low sulfur content limited
supplies in most areas
Extensively used as a fuel because of its high
heat content and large supplies normally has
a high sulfur content
Highly desirable fuel because of its high heat
content and low sulfur content supplies are
limited in most areas
23Nuclear Energy
- Location (world) France, Sweden, Russia Location
(US) Mostly east of the Mississippi River
24Nuclear Energy
- So how long do we think it will last?
- US reserves undetermined. No new reactors have
been ordered since 1978 and all ordered after
1973 were cancelled. Power plant lasts only about
60 years - World Reserves 1000-8000 (breeder reactors)
25Nuclear Energy
- Advantages Large fuel supply, moderate land use,
moderate/low pollution - Disadvantages subject to terrorist attack,
weapon-grade, LONG storage of waste.
26Radioactive Waste
- Must be stored for 10,000 (closed fuel cycle) to
240,000 years (open fuel cycle)
27A once through (or open) fuel cycle
28Step 1
- Uranium is mined, enriched and manufactured to
nuclear fuel which is delivered to a nuclear
power plant.
29Step 2 and 3
- After usage in the power plant the spent fuel is
delivered to a reprocessing plant (2) or to final
repository (3) for permanent storage in a safe
place, such as inside rock.
30Step 4
- In reprocessing 95 of spent fuel can be recycled
to be returned to usage in a power plant.
31Radioactive Waste
- Storage ideas
- Bury underground
- Shoot to space or sun
- Bury on stable area of ocean floor (prohibited by
law) - Change into less harmful isotopes
32Radioactive Waste
- Storage ideas
- Bury under Antarctic Ice Sheet, Greenland ice cap
(prohibited by law)
33Radioactive Waste
- Storage ideas
- Dump into oceanic subduction area (prohibited by
law)
34Radioactive Waste
- Storage ideas
- Yucca Mountain Desert storage
35TRANSPORTATION OF NUCLEAR WASTE IN MICHIGAN
36Breeder Reactors
- Fissionable U-235, Pu-239
- Commonly found U-238, non fissionable
- Takes non-fissionable Uranium and converts it to
fissionable Plutonium (add 2p and remove 1n) - Advantages/Disadvantages to be presented by
classmates
37Fusion
- D-T fusion possible at 100,000,000oC
(180,000,000oF) - No CO2 emissions, infinite fuel supply, no melt
down concerns, no weapon grade radioactive
materials, waste would only need stored 100 years
or so. - Still only experimental earliest use in 2030,
2100 more likely