When we talk about renewable energy we are referring to
power that delivers energy from resources that will not be
depleted because of our use of them. Renewable energy is an
alternative to non-renewable fossil fuel energy for reasons
other than the factor of non-depletion.
One basic benefit of renewable energy, and the reason
environmentalists all over the globe are advocate its use, is
that it does give off greenhouse gases and other harmful
pollutants as do the by-products of burning fossil fuel for
energy. Renewable energy such as solar power, water power and
wind power, while the widespread discussion of which is new,
are anything but new.
In both newly developing and highly developed countries
wind, sun and water have long been used as power sources,
though not to the extent of providing the primary energy source
for large metropolitan communities.
The mass production of such renewable energy is become
commonplace in recent years as more and more people come to
realize how climate is changing due to the pollution of fossil
fuel gases, due to the exhaustion of the availability of these
fossil fuels and the political and social concerns of energy
sources such as nuclear power.
Many countries and non-profit environmentally-conscious
organizations are encouraging the use of renewable energy
sources by passing legislation on tax incentives for their use
and subsidies to offset the added expense of converting from
fossil fuel to renewable energy.
The flow of renewable energy involves phenomena that occur
naturally in our world. Tides, sunlight, wind and heat derived
by geothermal occurrences all provide renewable energy. Each of
these energy sources is unique both in where we can use them
and how.
Most technology that converts renewable energy into power
sources we can use are powered at least in part by the Sun if
not directly at least indirectly. The earths atmospheric system
stays in such equilibrium that the heat that it gives off
radiates into space to an amount equal to the radiation that
comes to earth from the sun.
The result of this energy level within the atmosphere is
roughly translated to the climate of the earth. The water of
the earth, also referred to its hydrosphere, absorbs a lot of
the radiation that comes to us from the sun.
Most of the radiation gets absorbed at the lower latitudes
of the earth that exist around the equator. This energy gets
dissipated all around the globe, however, in the form of ocean
and wind currents.
The motion of the ocean waves might have a role in
transference of mechanical energy between the ocean and the
earths atmosphere by way of wind stress. Solar energy also
provides the means by which precipitations is distributed and
then tapped by hydroelectric energy projects as well as plant
growth that then creates biofuels.
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