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Energy in the United States Electricity, Nuclear Energy, Renewable Energy. Summary report by Sarah Lahr Sustainable Air Quality 2/11/02. History of Electricity. Electricity has been a power source for only about 100 years old
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Energy in the United StatesElectricity, Nuclear Energy, Renewable Energy Summary report by Sarah Lahr Sustainable Air Quality 2/11/02
History of Electricity • Electricity has been a power source for only about 100 years old • Edison wanted to "make electric light so cheap that only the rich will be able to burn candles" • From 1890 to 1910 many industries started using electricity including: mining, textiles, steel, and printing • FDR’s Rural Electrification Administration (REA) in 1935 brought electricity to rural America after the Depression • Advantages: clean, flexible, controllable, safe, effortless, and instantly available.
Electricity Usage • High usage of electricity by the residential sector • Since 1949, electricity usage has increased 1,315 percent (population has only increased 89 percent) • Per-capita usage has increased 7 times since 1949 Electric Utility Retail Sales by Sector
Source of Electricity • Main source of electricity comes from coal • Natural gas, petroleum, and nuclear power are also major contributors Electricity Net Generation by Source for 2000
Non-utility Electricity Increase Electric Power Sector Net Summer Capability • Non-utility power producers are increasing, showing less regulation and more competition between companies • Percentage of non-utility electricity consumed increased from 20 percent to 26 percent from 1999 to 2000
Cost of Electricity to Consumer Consumer Prices for Electricity, Natural Gas, and Motor Gasoline for 2000 • Cost of electricity is high because it accounts for both the cost to generate the electricity and to move it to the point of use • Most of the energy is lost in the form of heat • For every three units of energy that are converted to create electricity, only about one unit actually reaches the end user.
Nuclear Energy • The energy source with truly modern roots • The concept: Controlled fission of heavy elements releases large amounts of energy • Nuclear energy was originally viewed as a way to avoid energy dependence on those countries from which the United States imported crude oil
Nuclear Generation Units Number of Operable Units • Peak number of reactor units was reached in 1990 with 112 units in operation • Reductions in demand due to the accident at Three Mile Island in 1979, concerns about safety, and the high cost of building the plants • Cancellations of plant orders and shutdowns of plants increased • Currently only 104 operable reactor units • No new plants are expected to be built
Renewable Energy Energy Consumption by Source • Until recently, renewable energy was the only form of energy • It still accounts for only a small amount of the total energy consumed • Renewable energy accounts for about the same amount as nuclear energy
Renewable Energy: Water • Watermills have been used for milling grain, pumping water, working metal, sawing, and crushing chalk or sugar cane • Currently, watermills are mainly used to generate electricity • River water is held back by dams and used to run turbines which produce energy
Renewable Energy: Biomass • The main sources of biomass energy include wood and waste. Other sources, however, include methanol, ethanol, peat, agricultural waste, straw, tires, landfill gas, fish oil, and others • Wood accounted for almost half of the renewable energy in 2000
Renewable Energy: Other Sources • Geothermal energy accounted for 5% of the renewable energy in 2000 • Solar and wind energy do not contribute as much as most people think. In 2001, they contributed for only about 1% of the renewable energy • Despite its minimal contribution, wind energy production has increased 113 percent since 1989
Summary • Electricity is a major energy source, despite its higher cost, because it is cleaner and safer than fossil fuels • Nuclear energy is not used very much because of safety concerns and the high cost of production • Renewable energy continues to contribute a small amount of energy, especially water and its ability to generate electricity using dams
What I Learned • These reports gave me a better understanding of how the different energy sources related to each other, especially those used to generate electricity • It was interesting to see that world affairs and economics played a big part in the advancement of energy technology • The distribution of electricity to rural America was halted due to the Depression • Nuclear energy research was postponed until the end of World War II.