Nonrenewable%20Energy%20Resources - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Nonrenewable%20Energy%20Resources

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Chapter 12 Nonrenewable Energy Resources – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nonrenewable%20Energy%20Resources


1
Chapter 12
  • Nonrenewable Energy Resources

2
All Energy Use Has Consequences
  • Oil
  • Jan 1969
  • 1989
  • 2005
  • April 2010
  • Coal
  • April 2010 - ? coal mine
  • Coal miners develop black lung disease and other
    respiratory ailments
  • Natural Gas
  • Considered to be the clean fossil fuel
  • Extraction difficult
  • So whats the problem?

3
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill April 20, 2010
  • Aka BP oil spill
  • Oil flowed unabated for 89 days
  • Cause explosion on platform
  • Methane gas explosion
  • Problem?
  • July 15, 2010 the leak was stopped
  • Estimated 206 million gallons of crude oil
    released

4
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
  • September 19, 2010 the relief well process was
    successfully completed
  • November 2010 4,200 square miles of the Gulf
    were re-closed to shrimping after tar balls found
    in shrimpers' nets
  • January 2011 oil spill commissioner reported
    that problems still exist
  • February 2011 researchers found tar on the
    bottom of the seafloor did not seem to be
    degrading
  • July 9, 2011 roughly 491 miles of coastline in
    LA, MS, AL and FL remained contaminated
  • September 2011 U.S. government published its
    final investigative report on the accident.
  • January 2015 BP Plc will face a maximum fine of
    13.7 billion under the Clean Water Act for its
    Gulf of Mexico oil spill, several billion less
    than feared, after a judge found on Thursday the
    size of the spill was smaller than the U.S.
    government claimed.

5
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
  • Extensive damage to
  • Techniques to remove oil/protect beaches,
    wetlands, estuaries

6
http//ecopolitology.org/2010/06/08/cutaway-of-dee
pwater-horizon-oil-spill-response-graphic/
7
Initial Estimates
January 2015 Legislation Estimate 465,700
8
Worst Oil Spills in History, as of Nov 2010
9
An interesting animation
  • http//www.nrdc.org/energy/gulfspill/belowsurface.
    asp

10
Back to your textbook
11
Nonrenewable Energy
  • Nonrenewable energy resources 2 categories
  • Fossil fuels (
    )
  • Combustion - burn the fuels
  • Nuclear fuels
  • Units of energy
  • J joule
  • EJ (exajoule) 1 x 109 gigajoules
  • Quad not used in US
  • Btu British thermal unit

12
Worldwide Patterns of Energy Use
  • Each country uses energy at different rates
  • Uses different energy resources
  • 2008 R image

13
Energy Use
  • Energy not distributed equally around world
  • WHY?
  • Terminology
  • Commercial energy sources
  • Subsistence energy sources

14
Patterns of Energy Use in US
  • Many changes since 1850s
  • Main energy sources (in order) oil, coal,
    natural gas
  • Energy use varies regionally and seasonally

15
Process of Energy Use
  • Energy efficiency, includes
  • Many opportunities for energy loss ? reduces
    energy efficiency
  • EROEI (energy return on energy investment)

EROEI Energy obtained from fuel
Energy invested to get fuel
16
Efficiency and Transportation
  • 30 of energy in US is used for transportation
  • Transportation movement of people and goods
  • Transportation efficiency does not take into
    account

17
Electricity Generation
  • Primary source of energy coal, oil, natural gas
  • Secondary source of energy electricity

18
Energy Efficiency
  • Most coal burning power plants are about 35
    efficient
  • Combined cycle natural gas-fired power plant
  • 60 efficient
  • Capacity maximum electrical output
  • Capacity factor the fraction of the time a
    plant can operate in a year

19
Cogeneration
  • Using a fuel to generate electricity and to
    produce heat
  • Aka combined heat and power
  • Improves the efficiency to as high as 90

20
Fossil fuels provide most of the worlds energy
  • Fossil fuels coal, oil and natural gas
  • Come from deposits of organic matter formed
    50-350 million years ago
  • In anaerobic environment
  • Are carbon sinks

21
Coal
  • A solid fuel formed primarily from the remains of
    trees, ferns, and other plant materials
  • Four types of coal ranked from lesser to greater
    age, exposure to pressure, and energy content
  • Lignite softest coal
  • Subbituminous coal
  • Bituminous coal most common type
  • Anthracite highest grade of coal
  • Peat precursor to coal
  • Composed of partly decomposed organic matter
  • Largest coal reserves United States, Russia,
    China, and India.

22
Coal
23
Advantages and Disadvantages of Coal
Advantages Disadvantages







24
Petroleum
  • Mixture of hydrocarbons, water, and sulfur
  • Remains of ocean-dwelling phytoplankton
  • Crude oil liquid petroleum removed from ground
  • US uses petroleum more than any other fuel for
  • Gasoline about ½ of the petroleum we use
  • Raw materials for
  • Most petroleum Saudi Arabia, Russia, the United
    States, Iran, China, Canada, and Mexico

25
Petroleum
26
Advantages and Disadvantages of Petroleum
Advantages Disadvantages




27
Natural Gas
  • Natural gas- exists as a component of petroleum
    in the ground as well as in gaseous deposits
    separate from petroleum
  • From phytoplankton
  • Contains 80 to 95 percent methane and 5 to 20
    percent ethane, propane, and butane
  • Uses in US
  • Compressed natural gas fuel for vehicles
  • Liquefied petroleum gas in lieu of natural gas,
    portable barbecue grills and heaters

28
Advantages and Disadvantages Natural Gas
Advantages Disadvantages



29
Other Fossil FuelsOil Sands
  • Not readily available
  • Oil sands- slow-flowing, viscous deposits of
    bitumen mixed with sand, water, and clay
  • Bitumen (tar or pitch)-
  • Benefits- extends petroleum supply
  • Negative environmental impacts

30
Other Fossil FuelsLiquefied Coal
  • CTL coal-to-liquid
  • Converts soil coal to liquid fuel
  • Technology has been around for decades
  • Benefits
  • Downsides

31
Fossil fuels are a finite resource
  • Energy intensity energy use per unit of gross
    domestic product
  • Energy used more efficiently but
  • More people
  • More energy used

32
The Hubbert Curve
  • Hubbert curve- a graph that shows the point at
    which world oil production would reach a maximum
    and the point at which we would run out of oil
  • Peak oil point at which ½ of total known oil
    supply is used up
  • 1969 Hubbert predicted 80 of worlds oil
    would be used up in 60 years

33
The Future of Fossil Fuel Use
  • How long will our fossil fuels last? - If
    current global use continues, we will run out of
  • Conventional oil
  • Natural gas
  • Coal supplies
  • Some factors influencing use of fossil fuels

34
Nuclear Energy Fuel-Uranium
  • Another conventional, nonrenewable fuel that does
    not significantly add to greenhouse gases in
    atmosphere.

35
Nuclear Energy
  • Fission- a nuclear reaction in which a neutron
    strikes a relatively large atomic nucleus, which
    then splits into two or more parts
  • Chain reaction
  • Releases heat
  • Fuel U-235 common
  • Byproducts radioactive waste

36
Nuclear Reactors
37
Advantages and Disadvantages of Nuclear Energy
Advantages Disadvantages


38
Fukushima, Japan
  • 6 reactors affected
  • Loss of power reactors overheated
  • Full meltdown of 3 reactors
  • Attempt to use seawater ? ruined reactors
  • Other concerns
  • Total radioactivity released was 1/10 of
    Chernobyl
  • Most at risk workers
  • Recommendations for infants?

39
Since
  • Pale grass blue butterflies
  • 2 months after (sample 144)
  • 12 of butterflies affected
  • 6 months after (sample 258)
  • 28 of butterflies affected
  • http//worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/08/14/1327
    4288-study-japan-nuclear-disaster-caused-mutated-b
    utterflies?lite

40
Radioactive Waste
  • Radioactive waste nuclear fuel that can no
    longer produce enough heat to be useful in a
    power plant but continues to emit radioactivity
  • 3 types
  • High-level radioactive waste
  • Low-level radioactive waste
  • Uranium mine tailings

41
Radioactive WasteMeasuring Radiation
  • Units
  • Becquerel (Bq)
  • 1 Bq the decay of one atom per second
  • Curie
  • 1 curie 37 billion decays per second

42
Radioactive Wastes
  • Spent fuel rods remain threat for 10 or more ½
    lives ? long term storage is important
  • All spent fuel rods must be stored at the plant
  • Long term solution to waste
  • Possibilities
  • Standards for LTS
  • So what was thought up Yucca Mountain burial

43
Radioactive WasteYucca Mountain, NV
  • 1978 started looking at location
  • Lots of protest/ controversy
  • 2006 considered safe storage location
  • Few years later ? cancelled

44
Stuff to add from old textbookDecommissioning
Nuclear Power Plants
  • Licensed to operate for 40 years
  • Several have received 20-year extensions
  • Power plants cannot be abandoned when they are
    shut down
  • Three solutions
  • Storage
  • Entombment
  • Decommissioning (dismantling)

45
Fusion
  • Nuclear fusion- occurs when lighter nuclei are
    forced together to produce heavier nuclei
  • Heat is released
  • Most promising reaction
  • Promising, unlimited source of energy in the
    future
  • Input hydrogen
  • Problem creating fusion requires reactor can
    heat material to 10x the temperature of the Suns
    core
  • Promising technique

46
  • Look at Table 12.2 in your book!
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