Here
are the key points from this section:
- Electricity is generated using the following fuel
sources: coal, nuclear, natural gas, petroleum and renewable resources.
- Renewable resources
include hydropower (which traditionally makes up over 95 percent of renewable
generation), geothermal, biomass, wind, solar, and photovoltaics.
- Coal is popular (51%
of Net Generation) because it's cheap and simple.
- Nuclear (20% of Net
Generation) is cheapest, but most complicated.
- Natural Gas (15% of
Net Generation) is convenient, clean but getting expensive.
- Oil/Petroleum (4% of
Net Generation) is expensive, but convenient and easy to use.
- Gasoline and Diesel
(0.8% of Net Generation) is relatively expensive, but readily available.
- Hydro power is not really
a fuel, so much as a form of potential energy. It is an important energy
resource in the global economy. It makes up 9% of Net Generation.
- On a bright, sunny day the sun shines approximately
1,000 watts of energy per square meter on the planet's surface. Solar
power represents 0.1% of Net Generation.
- Biomass is "any
organic matter which is available on a renewable basis, including agricultural
crops and agricultural wastes and residues, wood and wood wastes and residues,
animal wastes, municipal wastes, and aquatic plants." It accounts for
2% of Net Generation.
- A pipeline is a series
of connected pipes, equipped with pumps and valves and other control devices,
for moving natural gas.
Now let's take a look at the Power Grid. |