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Nonrenewable Energy Resources

Nonrenewable Energy Resources

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Nonrenewable Energy Resources. Oil Rules!!! What is crude oil?. Petroleum, or crude oil is a thick, gooey liquid consisting of many combustible hydrocarbons. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nonrenewable Energy Resources

Nonrenewable Energy Resources

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Oil Rules!!! What is crude oil?Petroleum, or crude oil is

a thick, gooey liquid consisting of many combustible hydrocarbons.

• Formed over millions of year from decaying organic materials buried under the seafloor and subjected to extreme temperatures and pressure.

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Oil Rules!!! Transportation

How crude oil is transported:• Pipelines• Trucks• Oil Tankers

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Oil Rules!!! What is crude oil?Crude oil and natural gas often found together in

deep deposits in pores and cracks.• Found using sophisticated equipment.• Usually only 30-35% is extractable • Higher prices mean more can be extracted.

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1 barrel is 42 gallons

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Conventional Oil: DisadvantagesRunning out

Low prices encourage waste

Air pollution and Greenhouse gases

Water pollution World Politics and Trade Imbalances

Most is located outside of the US

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Conventional Oil: AdvantagesRelatively low cost

High net energy yield

Efficient distribution system

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Oil, What Is Left?Most energy expert

believe there are about 1,050 billion barrels left.

Peak Production This Decade

Rising Demand, Dwindling Supply = Higher Prices

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Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Controversy: Trade-offs

Would create jobs -mostly short-term

Oil resources are uncertain

Harmful environmental impacts

Drilling controversies

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The Last True Wilderness: The Arctic National Wildlife Reserve

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What is at stake? The pristine boreal forests of Canada-the greatest songbird nursery in our continent

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What it would look like if Keystone XL is approved

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Carbon Dioxide Emissions Per Unit of Energy

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What is natural gas?

Mainly methane CH4

Also• Ethane C2H6

• Propane C3H8

• Butane C4H10

Formed like oil from buried animals and plants millions of years ago.

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Where is it found?Deposits usually found above oil deposits.

In past was seen as unwanted waste and burnt off.

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U.S. Natural Gas

U.S. supplies should last 55-80 years depending upon demand.

Supplies have been declining for years.

Canada???

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How is it used?

• 53% of heat in U.S. homes

• 16% of electricity and growing quickly

• Hot water heaters• Can be used in vehicles

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Advantages of Gas

• Cleaner burning than coal or oil.

• Emits far fewer CO2 per energy units

• More efficient energy producer and plants are cheaper to build

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Disadvantages of Natural Gas

• Nonrenewable• Releases CO2 when

burned• Wasted when

burned off at oil sites• Methane(another

greenhouse gas) can leak from pipes

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What is coal?

Coal is a solid fuel formed in several stages from remains of buried plants and animals.

Consists mostly of carbon and trace amounts of sulfur, mercury and radioactive materials.

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Coal Formation and Types

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How is coal extracted? Surface Mining:• Area Strip Mining• Contour Strip Mining• Mountaintop Removal

Underground MiningLarge environmental impact from different mining techniques.

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How is coal used?

Coal provides 51% of current U.S. electricity. (62% worldwide)

Used to make ¾ of worlds steel.

A typical 1,000 Megawatt power plant uses 8,000 tons of coal every day…1 mile long train worth of coal every day.

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How is coal used?

91% of coal in U.S. is used for power production.

Not useful for transportation energy needs.

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How long will coal last?

According to USGS…

U.S. reserves could last 300 years at current rate of consumption…or 64 years if consumption grows by 4% a year.

World’s most abundant fossil fuel.

U.S. Energy Projections

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Coal Advantages

• Most abundant fossil fuel.

• High “Net Energy”• Relatively inexpensive.• U.S. has plenty of it for

a while.• Power Plants relatively

cheap to build.

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Coal Disadvantages

• High environmental impact (air, water, land, acid rain)

• Global Warming, high CO2 emissions

• Toxic Mercury and radioactivity

• Dangerous to mine

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Origin of Nuclear Power

• Uranium, a radioactive element mined from the ground

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What is nuclear power?

• Nuclear power is an alternative power source that uses the nuclear fission- splitting an atom of uranium to create heat and radioactive waste.

• Heat and lighter atoms are produced.

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Advantages of Nuclear Power

• Large Fuel Supply• Little Air Pollution and CO2

emissions• Moderate to low water

and land environmental impact

• Low risk of accidents (multiple safety levels – except in old Soviet reactors)

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Disadvantages of Nuclear Power

• High cost of building and operating plants

• Possibility of catastrophic accidents

• No long-term solutions for waste

• Spreads knowledge of nuclear weapon technology

• Terrorist Attacks

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Dealing with Nuclear Waste High- and low-level wastes

Terrorist threats

Underground burial

Disposal in space

Burial in ice sheets

Dumping into subduction zones

Burial in ocean mud

Conversion into harmless materials