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Energy: Powering Our Nation

Discover why Canada is a leading energy user globally due to factors like its cold climate, vast geography, and industrial economy. Explore conventional and alternative energy sources such as oil, gas, coal, hydro, nuclear, solar, wind, and biomass. Learn about the formation of oil and gas deposits in Canada and the challenges of extraction. Delve into the production of oil sands in Alberta and the generation of electricity through hydro, thermal, and nuclear processes. Understand the advantages and disadvantages of thermal and nuclear electricity generation, along with the complexities of transmitting electricity to markets. Dive into the intricacies of Canada's energy landscape and its impact on national and global energy consumption.

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Energy: Powering Our Nation

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  1. Energy: Powering Our Nation Chapter 24

  2. Why do you think Canada would be the highest user of energy in the world? • Cold climate • Spread out population – high transportation costs • Industrial Economy • Energy is cheap so we tend to waste it!

  3. Energy Sources • Conventional Energy Sources • Oil/Natural Gas, Coal, Hydro and Nuclear Energy • Alternative Energy Sources • Solar, Wind, Biomass Energy

  4. Energy Terminology(do not have to write) • To compare different forms of energy we need a common unit of measure • The basic unit to measure energy is the joule (J) • One joule is a tiny amount of energy • Usually energy is reported in gigajoules which equal one billion joules or pentajoules which equal one million gigajoules

  5. Oil and Gas • Oil and gas are found together • How they formed • Millions of years ago parts of Canada was covered with shallow seas. • Dead plants and animals fell to the sea floor • Eventually the sea evaporated and sediments formed layers on top of the dead plants and animals • The pressure from all the layers of sediment converted the plant and animal matter into oil and gas

  6. Finding Oil and Gas(do not have to write) • It is hard find oil and gas deposits because they are buried so deep • Geologists use the following tricks to find the deposits: • Look for rocks on the surface that have traces of oil • Search for fossils • Conduct seismic surveys that use shock waves

  7. Drilling for oil and gas (do not have to write) • Determining if oil and gas are where you think it is can only be done by drilling • It’s costly and time consuming • There are three results of drilling • No oil or gas • Oil and gas are found but there is not enough to justify the cost of extraction and transport • The deposit is large enough to develop

  8. Collecting the Oil and Gas • Removal of oil from the ground proceeds in one of two ways: • Flowing Wells – there is enough natural pressure to force the oil or gas to the surface. The flow at the surface is controlled by a series of valves called a Christmas tree • Non-flowing wells – electric or gas powered pumps are used to get the oil or gas to the surface

  9. Canada’s Oil and Gas • Most production comes from the western part of the Boreal Plains and Prairie Ecozones • Production comes from conventional crude oil that is pumped from the ground and from oil sands.

  10. Oil Sand • Oil sand is an area that has bitumen covering individual particles of sand • Bitumen is an oil-like substance • The oil sand is easily dug up but then it is hard to get the oil separated from the sand • Expensive process • As conventional deposits get used up the extraction of the oil from the oil sands will increase

  11. Alberta’s Oil Sands

  12. Flattening out the land

  13. Electricity • Most electrical energy comes from a generator • Generators convert mechanical energy into electrical energy • In Canada there are three main ways that this mechanical energy is produced • Moving water – Hydro Electric Generating Stations • Expanding steam – Thermal Electric Generation Plants • Expanding Steam – Nuclear Electric Generating Stations

  14. Thermal Electricity • The steam that is used to move the turbine is created by burning fuel like coal, oil, natural gas, wood, etc. • Advantages • Plants can be built where the energy is needed therefore there are short transmission lines • Plants are relatively cheap to build • Disadvantages • Fuel costs are high • Most of the fuels used are non-renewable • Carbon dioxide is produced

  15. Nuclear Electricity • The steam that is used to turn the turbines comes from the heat created by nuclear fission. • Nuclear fission is the radioactive breakdown of uranium atoms

  16. Nuclear Electricity • Advantages • Plants can be built where energy is needed • Low operating costs • We have lots of uranium in Canada • Normally they do not produce air pollution • Disadvantages • High construction costs • Radioactive materials are very harmful to humans • Waste products remain dangerous for 100 000 yrs • Plants need to be rebuilt relatively often

  17. Getting the Electricity to Market • Often electricity is transmitted 100s of kms to where the people that need it are • The generating systems direct their electricity to power grids • The customers then take the electricity from the grid. • Provinces and states in North America have grids that are all connected therefore electricity becomes a commodity that can be exported for profit

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