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Renewable Energy

These notes offer an overview of renewable energy sources, their benefits, and the challenges associated with their implementation, promoting sustainable energy solutions for the future.

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Hisoka Amorou
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views3 pages

Renewable Energy

These notes offer an overview of renewable energy sources, their benefits, and the challenges associated with their implementation, promoting sustainable energy solutions for the future.

Uploaded by

Hisoka Amorou
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Renewable Energy – Class Notes

Definition:
Renewable energy is derived from natural sources that are replenished on a human timescale,
such as sunlight, wind, water, and biomass. It contrasts with non-renewable energy, like fossil
fuels, which take millions of years to form and are finite.

Types of Renewable Energy:


1. Solar Energy:

●​ Source: Sunlight.
●​ How it Works: Solar panels (photovoltaic cells) convert sunlight into electricity.
●​ Applications: Residential electricity, solar farms, solar water heaters.
●​ Advantages: Abundant, low maintenance, reduces electricity bills.
●​ Disadvantages: Weather-dependent, high initial cost, requires space.

2. Wind Energy:

●​ Source: Wind (air movement due to atmospheric pressure differences).


●​ How it Works: Wind turbines convert kinetic energy from wind into electricity.
●​ Applications: Wind farms, rural electrification.
●​ Advantages: Clean, cost-effective in windy areas, scalable.
●​ Disadvantages: Intermittent, noisy, can impact wildlife.

3. Hydropower (Hydroelectric Energy):

●​ Source: Flowing or falling water.


●​ How it Works: Dams or turbines harness the energy of flowing water to generate
electricity.
●​ Applications: Large-scale electricity generation, irrigation systems.
●​ Advantages: Reliable, flexible, efficient.
●​ Disadvantages: Environmental impact, high construction cost, limited suitable locations.

4. Biomass Energy:

●​ Source: Organic materials (plants, agricultural waste, wood).


●​ How it Works: Biomass is burned or converted into biofuels (e.g., ethanol) to produce
energy.
●​ Applications: Heating, electricity generation, biofuels for transport.
●​ Advantages: Reduces waste, can be carbon-neutral.
●​ Disadvantages: Can cause deforestation, air pollution, requires land and water.

5. Geothermal Energy:

●​ Source: Heat from within the Earth's crust.


●​ How it Works: Steam from underground reservoirs powers turbines to generate
electricity.
●​ Applications: Electricity generation, direct heating (e.g., hot springs).
●​ Advantages: Reliable, low emissions, small land footprint.
●​ Disadvantages: Location-specific, high upfront cost, possible resource depletion.

6. Tidal and Wave Energy:

●​ Source: Ocean tides and waves.


●​ How it Works: Tidal turbines and wave energy converters harness water movement to
generate electricity.
●​ Applications: Coastal power generation.
●​ Advantages: Predictable, renewable.
●​ Disadvantages: High costs, environmental concerns, limited locations.

Importance of Renewable Energy:


●​ Environmental Benefits: Reduces greenhouse gas emissions and pollution.
●​ Energy Security: Reduces dependency on imported fuels.
●​ Sustainable: Replenished naturally.
●​ Economic Growth: Creates jobs and new industries.

Challenges of Renewable Energy:


●​ Intermittency: Some sources depend on weather conditions.
●​ Storage: Energy storage technology (e.g., batteries) is expensive.
●​ High Initial Costs: Infrastructure and setup costs can be significant.
●​ Land Use: Some systems require large areas of land or water.
Future of Renewable Energy:
●​ Increasing technological advancements (e.g., better solar panels and batteries).
●​ Greater global investments and policy support.
●​ Key to combating climate change and achieving energy sustainability.

Conclusion:
Renewable energy is essential for a sustainable future. It offers environmental, economic, and
social benefits, though challenges remain in terms of cost, storage, and location dependency.
Continued advancements and policy support can further drive its adoption.

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