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Nonrenewable Energy. Chapter 15. Nonrenewable Resources. Things human use that have a limited supply; they cannot be regrown or replenished by man. Dealing with Nonrenewable Resources.
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Nonrenewable Energy Chapter 15
Nonrenewable Resources • Things human use that have a limited supply; they cannot be regrown or replenished by man
Dealing with Nonrenewable Resources • Possible Solution– using less of a resource or reusing a resource, ex. refilling plastic laundry jugs, reusing plastic bags, etc. • Problems – • Requires a change in our lifestyle and some people will resist.
Restoration • Definition – recycling our resources • Examples – aluminum, glass, tin, steel, plastics, etc. • Problems – recycling a resource often costs more than using the raw material; we don’t have the technology to recycle everything
Sustainability • Definition – prediction of how long specific resources will last; ex. we have a 200 year supply of coal in the U.S. • Problems – these are only predictions; they may not be accurate
Harvesting Nonrenewable Resources-COSTS • Ownership costs – equipment, labor, safety (insurance), environmental costs (reclamation, pollution control, air monitors, water treatment, etc.), taxes • External costs – processing the resource, transporting the resource • Marginal costs – research: finding new sources of the resource and new ways to harvest it
Harvesting Nonrenewable Resources-BENEFITS • Direct – money received for resources; provides many jobs • Indirect – land can be reclaimed (brought back to original condition) and sold for profit.
Primary Resources • Original sources that are used to make electricity or heat
SecondarySources • Heat and electricity that we use for energy
Cogeneration • Production of two useful forms of energy, such as high-temperature heat or steam and electricity, from the same fuel source. • Ex. An industry using natural gas for manufacturing and using the waste heat to produce electricity.
Examples of Primary Sources Fossil Fuels • Energy conversion – chemical to electrical, heat or mechanical • Only about 30% efficient • Benefits – easy to use, currently abundant • Costs – a nonrenewable resource, produces pollutants that contribute to acid rain and the greenhouse effect • Oil- Supplies the most commercial energy in the world today. People in the U.S. use 23 barrels of petroleum per person or 6 billion barrels total each year!!!
Core Case Study: How Long Will Supplies of Conventional Oil Last? • Saudi Arabia could supply the world with oil for about 10 years. • The Alaska’s North Slope could meet the world oil demand for 6 months. (U.S.: 3 yrs.) • Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) would meet the world demand for 1-5 months. (U.S.: 7-24 months)
Core Case Study: How Long Will Supplies of Conventional Oil Last? • We have three options: • Look for more oil • Use or waste less oil • Use other energy sources
Fossil Fuels Supply Most of Our Commercial Energy SOURCE : DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Annual Energy Review 2009 • About 82% of global commercial energy comes from nonrenewable fossil fuels with the remainder coming from renewable sources.
Commercial Energy Use by Source for the World and the United States
Case Study: A Brief History of Human Energy Use • A Brief History of Human Energy Use • Muscle power: early humans • Discovery of fire • Agriculture • Use of wind and flowing water • Machines powered by wood, then coal • Internal combustion engine • Nuclear energy • Energy crisis
We Depend Heavily on Oil • Crude oil(petroleum): thick liquid containing hydrocarbons that we extract from underground deposits and separate into products such as gasoline, heating oil and asphalt. • Only 35-50% can be economically recovered from a deposit.
Science: Refining Crude Oil • An oil refineryuses distillation to separate crude oil into it’s components: • Based on boiling points, components are removed at various layers in a giant distillation column. • The components with the lowest boiling points are removed at the top.
OPEC Controls Most of the World’s Oil Supplies • Twelve OPEC countries have 60% of the world’s proven oil reserves and most of the world’s unproven reserves. • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
Rising Oil Prices • Global oil production peaked around 2005 • Sharp increases in oil prices could threaten the economies of countries that have not shifted to new energy alternatives. • Possible effects of steeply rising oil prices: • Higher food prices • Airfares higher • Reduce energy waste • Upgrade of public transportation • Smaller more fuel-efficient vehicles • Shift to non-carbon energy sources • Higher prices for products made with petrochemicals
The United States Uses Much More Oil Than It Produces • The U.S. – the world’s largest oil user – has only 2.4% of the world’s proven oil reserves. • The U.S. uses 24% of worldwide crude oil. • The U.S. imports 60% of the oil it uses.
Case Study: Oil and the U.S. Arctic National Wildlife Refuge • The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) • Not open to oil and gas development • Fragile tundra biome • Decrease dependence on foreign oil?? • “Drill baby, drill!”
OIL PROs CONs CO2 emissions H2O pollution from tanker spills Habitat destruction from pipeline construction and oil spills • Relatively Cheap • Easily transported – pipelines, oil tankers • Versatile
Will Heavy Oil from Oil Sand or Shale Oil Be Viable Options? • Heavy and tarlike oils from oil sand and shale oil could supplement conventional oil, but there are environmental problems. • High sulfur content • Extracting and processing produces toxic sludge • Uses and contaminates larges volumes of water • Requires large inputs of energy which reduces net energy • Canada has 75% of the world’s oil sand. • The Western U.S. has 72% of the world’s shale oil.
Natural Gas Is a Useful and Clean-Burning Fossil Fuel • Natural gas, consisting mostly of methane (CH4), is often found above reservoirs of crude oil. • Coal beds, bubbles of methane trapped under the arctic permafrost and beneath deep-ocean sediments, and landfills are unconventional sources of natural gas.
Natural Gas Is a Useful and Clean-Burning Fossil Fuel • Russia, Iran, and Qatar have about 3/4 of the world’s reserves of conventional gas, and global reserves should last 62-125 years.
Natural Gas Is a Useful and Clean-Burning Fossil Fuel Produces electricity X 2 Fuel burning in a combustion chamber produces hot gases that pass directly through the turbine, which spins a generator to produce electricity. Then these hot gases are used to turn water to steam, which pushes a second turbine producing more electricity.
Natural Gas Is a Useful and Clean-Burning Fossil Fuel • Natural gas is transported through dense networks of pipelines • Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) • Pressurized tanks used in rural areas • Liquefied natural gas (LNG) • Gas is cooled and pressurized in order to ship across the ocean
Coal Comes in Several Forms and Is Burned Mostly to Produce Electricity • Coal: solid fossil fuel that is formed in several stages as the buried remains of land plants that lived 300-400 million years ago. • Burned in 2100 power plants, generates 40% of the world’s electricity (49% in the U.S.) • Inefficient process that burns coal to boil water which produces steam that turns a turbine
Coal • Most abundant fossil fuel! • 4 types: • Lignite • Low energy, low sulfur • Sub-bituminous • Intermediate energy, low sulfur • Bituminous • Intermediate energy, high sulfur • Anthracite • Hard coal: high energy, low sulfur, small quantities
Coal • Major use: electricity • Our current supply will last 150 – 200 years • Largest reserves: US, Russia, China
Coal Is a Plentiful but Dirty Fuel • Environmental costs of burning coal: • Single biggest air polluter in coal-burning countries • CO2 – one-fourth of the annual global emissions • Sulfur released as SO2 (acid rain) • Large amount of soot • Mercury (Hg) • Radioactive materials • Environmentalists call for: • Taxation on CO2 production by power plants • Cleaner coal-burning plants
NUCLEAR POWER The blue glow is known as Čerenkov radiation– when charged particles (electrons) passes through an insulator (water).
Nukes A Little Chemistry Review: • Nucleus = protons + neutrons • Protons: positive, = to atomic # • Neutrons: no charge, same mass as proton • Atomic mass = protons + neutrons • Electrons • Orbit nucleus, negative charge, = to protons • Isotope: different neutrons • Same number, same protons • Ion = charged particle