TYPES OF RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES PART8

Types of Renewable Energy Sources


  • Solar Energy

Humans have been harnessing solar energy for thousands of yearsto grow crops, stay warm, and dry foods. According to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, more energy from the sun falls on the earth in one hour than is used by everyone in the world in one year. Today, we use the suns rays in many waysto heat homes and businesses, to warm water, or power devices.

Solar, or photovoltaic (PV), cells are made from silicon or other materials that transform sunlight directly into electricity. Distributed solar systems generate electricity locally for homes and businesses, either through rooftop panels or community projects that power entire neighborhoods. Solar farms can generate power for thousands of homes, using mirrors to concentrate sunlight across acres of solar cells. Floating solar farmsor floatovoltaicscan be an effective use of wastewater facilities and bodies of water that arent ecologically sensitive.  

Solar supplies a little more than 1 percent of U.S. electricity generation. But nearly a third of all new generating capacity came from solar in 2017, second only to natural gas.

Solar energy systems dont produce air pollutants or greenhouse gases, and as long as they are responsibly sited, most solar panels have few environmental impacts beyond the manufacturing process.


  • Wind Energy

We have come a long way from old-fashioned wind mills. Today, turbines as tall as skyscraperswith turbines nearly as wide in diameterstand at attention around the world. Wind energy turns a turbines blades, which feeds an electric generator and produces electricity.

Wind, which accounts for a little more than 6 percent of U.S. generation, has become the cheapest energy source in many parts of the country. Top wind power states include California, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Iowa, though turbines can be placed anywhere with high wind speedssuch as hilltops and open plainsor even offshore in open water.


Other Alternative Energy Sources


  • Hydroelectric Power

Hydropower is the largest renewable energy source for electricity in the United States, though wind energy is soon expected to take over the lead. Hydropower relies on watertypically fast-moving water in a large river or rapidly descending water from a high pointand converts the force of that water into electricity by spinning a generators turbine blades.

Nationally and internationally, large hydroelectric plantsor mega-damsare often considered to be nonrenewable energy. Mega-dams divert and reduce natural flows, restricting access for animal and human populations that rely on rivers. Small hydroelectric plants (an installed capacity below about 40 megawatts), carefully managed, do not tend to cause as much environmental damage, as they divert only a fraction of flow.


  • Biomass Energy 

Biomass is organic material that comes from plants and animals, and includes crops, waste wood, and trees. When biomass is burned, the chemical energy is released as heat and can generate electricity with a steam turbine. 

Biomass is often mistakenly described as a clean, renewable fuel and a greener alternative to coal and other fossil fuels for producing electricity. However, recent science shows that many forms of biomassespecially from forestsproduce higher carbon emissions than fossil fuels. There are also negative consequences for biodiversity. Still, some forms of biomass energy could serve as a low-carbon option under the right circumstances. For example, sawdust and chips from sawmills that would otherwise quickly decompose and release carbon can be a low-carbon energy source.


  • Geothermal Energy

If youve ever relaxed in a hot spring, youve used geothermal energy. The earths core is about as hot as the suns surface, due to the slow decay of radioactive particles in rocks at the center of the planet. Drilling deep wells brings very hot underground water to the surface as a hydrothermal resource, which is then pumped through a turbine to create electricity. Geothermal plants typically have low emissions if they pump the steam and water they use back into the reservoir. There are ways to create geothermal plants where there are not underground reservoirs, but there are concerns that they may increase the risk of an earthquake in areas already considered geological hot spots.


  • Ocean

Tidal and wave energy is still in a developmental phase, but the ocean will always be ruled by the moons gravity, which makes harnessing its power an attractive option. Some tidal energy approaches may harm wildlife, such as tidal barrages, which work much like dams and are located in an ocean bay or lagoon. Like tidal power, wave power relies on dam-like structures or ocean flooranchored devices on or just below the waters surface.

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