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Unit 5: Energy

  • Page ID
    32740
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    Energy for lighting, heating and cooling our buildings, manufacturing products, and powering our transportation systems comes from a variety of natural sources. Nonrenewable energy is finite and cannot be replenished within a human timescale. Examples include nuclear energy and fossil fuels. In contrast renewable resources are replenished on shorter time scales, and it is thus possible to use them indefinitely. All energy sources have and some environmental and health cost, and the distribution of energy is not equally distributed among all nations.

    How much of the worlds energy comes from renewable sources. 0-20% (Example: United States, Russia, India), 20-40% (Example: Argentina, China, Australia, France), 40-60% (Example: Sweden, Finland, Turkey), 60-80% (Example: Canada, Sudan, Peru), 80-100% (Example: Norway, Iceland, Brasil, Pakistan)
    Figure \(\PageIndex{a}\): How much of the worlds energy comes from renewable sources. Graph by Our World in Data (CC-BY)

    Attribution

    Modified by Melissa Ha and Rachel Schleiger from Challenges and Impacts of Energy Use from Environmental Biology by Matthew R. Fisher (licensed under CC-BY)

    Thumbnail image - "Renewable energy on the grid" is in the Public Domain


    This page titled Unit 5: Energy is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Melissa Ha and Rachel Schleiger (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative) .

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