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Renewable energy is energy that is regenerative or,
for all practical purposes, virtually inexhaustible. It
includes solar energy, wind energy, hydropower, biomass
(derived from plants), geothermal energy (heat from the
earth), and ocean energy. Renewable energy resources can
supply energy for heating and cooling buildings, electricity
generation, heat for industrial processes, and fuels for
transportation. The increased use of renewable energy could
reduce the burning of fossil fuels (coal, petroleum, and
natural gas), eliminating associated air-pollution and
carbon dioxide emissions, and contributing to national
energy independence and economic and political security.
Historical and Current Use
Before the 1900s, the world as a whole used wood (including
wood converted to charcoal) for heat in homes and industry,
vegetation for feeding draft animals, water mills for
grinding grain and milling lumber, and wind for marine
transportation and grain milling and water pumping. By the
1920s, however, coal and petroleum had largely replaced
these energy sources in industrialized countries, although
wood for home heating and hydroelectric power generation
remained in wide use. At the end of the twentieth century,
nearly 90 percent of commercial energy supply was from
fossil fuels.
Renewable energy, however, makes important contributions to
world energy supplies. Hydroelectric power is a major source
of electrical energy in many countries, including Brazil,
Canada, China, Egypt, Norway, and Russia. In developing
countries many people do not have access to or cannot afford
electricity or petroleum fuels and use biomass for their
primary energy needs. For example, most rural people in
Africa use wood, scrub, grass, and even animal dung for
cooking fuel. Small-scale renewable energy technologies are
often the only practical means of supplying electricity in
rural areas of these countries. The table indicates the
relative consumption of energy sources in the United States.
Major Types of Renewable Energy Sources
Biomass. Biomass includes wood, agricultural crops and
residues, municipal refuse, wood and paper products,
manufacturing process waste, and human and livestock manure.
It can be used to heat homes and buildings, produce
electricity, and as a source of vehicle fuel. Wood and paper
manufacturers and sugar mills use biomass residues for
process heat and electricity production. There are power
plants that burn wood, agricultural residues, and household
trash to produce electricity. Biogas (composed of methane,
carbon dioxide, and other gases) produced by decomposing
biomass in anaerobic conditions is captured from landfills,
municipal sewage treatment plants, and livestock waste
management operations. This gas can be used for heat or to
generate electricity.
Ethanol is used as a transportation fuel in the United
States, Brazil, and a few other countries. Nearly all the
fuel ethanol in the United States is made from corn,
although it can also be produced from other sources,
including wastepaper. There is a small but growing
consumption of "biodiesel" made from grain oils and animal
fats.
Geothermal systems. Geothermal energy (heat from the earth)
created deep beneath the earth's surface is tapped to
produce electricity in twenty-two countries, some of which
include the United States, Iceland, Italy, Kenya, and the
Philippines. Geothermal hot springs can also heat buildings,
greenhouses, fish farms, and bathing pools.
Hydropower. Hydropower, produced from flowing water passing
through hydroelectric turbines, is the leading renewable
energy source, contributing to approximately 9 percent of
the electricity generated in the United States. Most
hydropower is produced at large dams, although there are
many small systems operating around the world, such as the
small hydropower plant in Namche Bazar, Nepal, which
provides power for the tourist and market town near Mt.
Everest. The production of hydroelectricity from year to
year varies with precipitation.
Ocean energy. The world's oceans are a vast and practically
untapped source of energy. There are a few operating wave
and tidal power plants around the world, and several
experimental ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) plants
have also been built. A small wave power plant in Norway
captures water from waves in a dam and lets the water out
through a turbine. A 240-megawatt tidal power facility on
the Rance River in France produces electricity as tidal
flows move back and forth through turbines located at the
mouth of the river. In Hawaii, a small OTEC plan was built
which uses the temperature of warm surface water to
evaporate cold seawater in a vacuum to produce steam that
turns a turbine and generator.
Solar energy systems. The simplest uses of solar energy are
for drying crops, and heating buildings and water.
Solar-heated homes and solar water heaters can be found in
nearly every country around the world. Crops can be simply
laid in the sun to dry, or more sophisticated collectors can
be used to heat air to dry food stored on drying racks.
Solar water heaters use collectors to heat water that is
stored in a tank for later use. Homes can be heated by using
a masonry floor to absorb sunshine coming through windows,
or by using solar collectors to heat a large tank of water
than can be distributed for heating at night.
Concentrated sunlight can be used to produce
high-temperature heat and electricity. Nine concentrating
solar parabolic trough power plants, with a combined
generation capacity of 354 megawatts, are located in the
Mojave Desert in California. (A megawatt is 1 million watts,
or 1,000 kilowatts.) The U.S. Department of Energy built and
tested a ten-megawatt solar thermal central receiver power
plant near Barstow, California, which operated successfully
for about seven years. Another type of concentrating solar
thermal power system is a parabolic dish. Systems with a
capacity of up to twenty-five kilowatts have been developed.
Photovoltaic (PV) systems are based on solar electric cells,
which convert sunlight directly to electricity. They can be
used to power hand calculators or in large systems on
buildings. Many PV systems are installed in remote areas
where power lines are expensive or unfeasible, although the
number of systems connected to electricity transmission
systems is increasing, and range in size from 1 to several
kilowatts on houses, to systems over one hundred kilowatts
on large buildings. PV systems are very suitable for use in
developing countries where people have no electricity from
electric power lines.
Wind energy systems. Water-pumping and grain-milling
windmills have evolved into electric power turbines. There
are now tens of thousands of wind turbines operating around
the world. They range in size from tiny turbines on the back
of sailboats to very large units that can produce as much as
2 to 3 megawatts of electricity, with 100-foot (30-meter)
blades. They can be installed on land and in shallow water
in coastal areas.
The Future for Renewable Energy
Renewable energy has many advantages that will help to
maintain and expand its place in world energy supply:
Renewable energy resources are enormous—hundreds of times
beyond the needs of world energy consumption in 2000.
Advances in technologies are reducing manufacturing costs
and increasing system efficiencies, thereby reducing the
cost of energy from renewable resources.
Negative environmental and health impacts of renewable
energy use are much fewer than those of fossil fuels and
nuclear power.
Many renewable energy technologies can produce energy at the
point of use, allowing homeowners, businesses, and industry
to produce their own power.
There is strong support for renewable energy from people
around the world.
Many governments have programs that support renewable energy
use to limit the emission of greenhouse gases and thereby
reduce the threat of global warming.
As fossil fuels such as oil and natural gas become scarce,
they will become more expensive. Some experts believe that
demand for oil will exceed production capability within the
next twenty years.
Using energy conservatively and efficiently, no matter how
it is produced or where it comes from, is the most
economical way to consume energy. Simply turning off lights
and computers when they are not in use can save an
individual household or business money and reduce the
environmental impact associated with producing electricity.
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