Title: Energy Resources: Renewable and Nonrenewable
1Energy ResourcesRenewable and Nonrenewable
2Renewable vs. Non-renewable
- Non-renewable resource
- Exists in finite supply
- Is used faster than it can replenish
- Ex oil, coal, nuclear fuels
- Renewable or perpetual
- Replenishes very rapidly
- Inexhaustible supply
- Ex solar, wind, hydropower
3Non-Renewable Energy Sources
- Conventional
- Petroleum
- Natural Gas
- Coal
- Nuclear
- Unconventional (examples)
- Oil Shale
- Natural gas hydrates in marine sediment
4Renewable Energy Sources
- Solar photovoltaic
- Passive solar air and water heating
- Wind
- Hydropower
- Biomass
- Ocean energy
- Geothermal
- Waste to Energy
5Evaluating Energy Resources
- US Energy Resources
- Renewable energy 8
- Considerations for Resources
- Future availability
6Petroleum (Oil) 39 of US Energy
- US uses 26 of oil
- extracted worldwide
- we have 2.9 of worlds oil reserves
- Depletion of our reserves
- means more oil imported
- World oil reserves 80
- depleted in 42-93 years
- Oil is a finite resource!
7Oil 39 of US Energy
- Pros of Oil
- High net energy
- Easily transported
- Strong infrastructure
- Cons of Oil
- Requires subsidies
- Air pollution
- Global warming
- Limited supplies
8Peak Production of Petroleum in US
9Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Is this the
answer?
- Would meet US needs for 7-24 months
- 1 mpg increase for new cars ANWR
10Natural Gas 23 of US Energy
- Mostly methane other gases
- LNG-versatile and high net energy
- Cleaner burning than oil or coal
- But, US has only 3 of world supply
11Coal 23 of US Energy
12Coal 23 of US Energy
- Produces 62 of worlds electricity and 52 of US
electricity - Most abundant fossil fuel and could easily last
at least 200 years - US has 25 of worlds reserves, Russia 16,
China 12 - High net energy yield, but
13Coal 23 of US Energy
- Accounts for 36 CO2 released
- Severely degrades land causing land, air and
water pollution - Severe human health threat
- Air pollution and acid rain
14Mining Waste Impacts on Surface and Groundwater
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16Nuclear 8 of US Energy
- Expensive--subsidies needed
- Catastrophic accidents possible
- No solution to nuclear waste disposal
- Subject to terrorist attack
- Significant fuel supply
- Low CO2 output
- Moderate land disruption and pollution but
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18Nuclear 8 of US Energy
Miller, 13th edition Fig. 15-36 p. 367
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20Nuclear Fusion
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23Fusion-Disadvantages
- Need around 100 millon degrees for duterium and
tritium to fuse - With our current technology, we use more energy
than we can produce.
24Oil Shale
- Fine grained rock containing a solid , waxy
mixture of hydrocarbons called kerogen - Extracted from rock by crushing and heating.
- Global supplies are potentially 200 times larger
than conventional oil.
25Oil Shale-Disadvantages
- Lower net energy yield
- Requires large amounts of water
- Contaminates water supplies with toxic metals
- Too expensive
26Tar Sands
- Mixture of clay, sand, water, and bitumen (gooey
black high-sulfur oil) - Removed by surface mining using pressurized steam
- Worlds largest supply in northern Alberta, Canada
27Tar Sands-Disadvantages
- Low net energy yield
- Requires large quanties of water
- Creates huge waste dispposal ponds
28Natural Gas Hydrates
- Methane Hydrates found in a solid form under
great pressure in deep ocean sediments - Cannot be retreived efficiently with current
technology
29Renewable Energy sources
30Solar Energy
- Solar energy consists of harnessing radiant
energy from the sun. - Active solar heats water or air inside a
home-requires electricity to circulate - Passive solar-the structure is built to maximize
solar capture - Photovoltaic cells generate electricity
31Solar Energy
- Limitless supply
- Little environmental impact
- Good for remote locations
- Inefficient where sunlight is limited
- Maintenance costs high
- Systems must be periodically replaced
- Current efficiency only 10-25
32Wind Energy
- Wind turns giant turbine blades that produce
electricity -
33Wind Energy
- Can be built quickly
- Maintenance is low
- Moderate to high energy yeild
- No air pollution
- Land underneath can be used for agriculture
- Steady wind is required
- Needs backup systems
- Visual and noise pollution
- May interfere with flight patterns of birds
34Hydropower 10 of US Energy
- Dams built to trap water, which in turn is then
released and channeled through turbines to
generate electricity
35Hydropower
- Control flooding
- Low operating cost
- No pollution
- Long life span
- Moderate to high energy yield
- Areas for water recreation
- Displace many people
- Destroy wildlife habitats
- Sedimentation requires dredging
- Expensive to build
- Destroys wild rivers
36Biomass
- Any carbon-based, biologically derived fuel
source. - Plants suitabelefor biofuel include switch grass,
corn, and sugarcane - Supplies about 15 of worlds energy
37Biomass
- Renewable energy source
- Can be sustainable
- Does not distupt atmospheric CO2
- Requires adequate water and fertilizer
- Could cause massive deforestation
- Expensive to transport
- Not efficient
38Geothermal lt 1 US Energy
- Heat from underground rock or magma used to
produce steam that drive turbines.
39Geothermal
- Moderate energy yield
- Limitless and reliable source if managed properly
- Little air pollution
- Competitive cost
- Reservoir sites are scarce
- Can be depleted if not managed properly
- Noise, odor, land subsidence
- Can degrade ecosystem
40Solutions
- Energy Efficiency!
- 43 of energy in the US is wasted unnecessarily
- Incandescent bulb5 efficient
- Fluorescent bulb20 efficient
- Auto fleet standards CAFE Standards (Corporate
Average Fuel Economy) - 12.9 mpg in 1974
- 27.9 mpg today
- 40 mpg CAFE standard would cut gas use by 50
41Efficiencies
42Ways to Improve Energy Efficiency
- Air to air heat exchangers
- Efficient electric motors
43Toward a Sustainable Energy Future
- Increase fuel efficiency standards for vehicle,
appliances, buildings - Tax and other financial incentives for energy
efficiency - Subsidize renewable energy use, research and
development - By 2050
- renewable energy50
- cut coal use by 50
- phase out nuclear altogether