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Chapter 11 Energy Resources

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Title: Chapter 11 Energy Resources


1
Chapter 11 Energy Resources
2
Energy Addiction
  • Canada is the 5th largest energy producer in the
    world
  • 98 of our total energy production is exported to
    the US
  • Canadians consume as much as the entire continent
    of Africa

3
Addiction to Oil
  • Huge oil addiction!
  • Oil drilling is hazardous
  • Bad for the environment
  • Releases pollutants
  • Oil spills

4
Energy Consumption
  • We depend on energy
  • What do we use energy for?
  • Developed vs. developing countries
  • Where is consumption increasing the most?
  • Projected consumption

5
Nonrenewable and Renewable
  • Nonrenewable
  • Natural resources that are present in limited
    supplies and depleted once used
  • Renewable
  • Resources that are replaced by natural processes
    and can be used forever if used sustainably

6
Canadas Total Energy Consumption
7
World Coal Production
8
Coal
  • Most abundant fossil fuel
  • Found mostly in N. Hemisphere
  • Could last 200 years
  • What do we use it for?
  • Use on the increase

9
Coal Surface Mining
  • Strip mining
  • Dig trench to extract mineral
  • Dig parallel trench
  • Cover old trench with new overburden
  • Spoil bank

10
Coal Subsurface Mining
  • Minerals deep in ground
  • Less land disturbance
  • More expensive
  • More hazardous

11
Environmental Impacts Of Coal
  • Abandoned mines
  • Acid mine drainage
  • Dangerous materials wash into streams, lakes
  • Landslides

12
Environmental Impacts Of Coal
  • Acid deposition
  • Leads to forest decline
  • Mountaintop removal
  • Valleys filled with tailings and debris
  • CO2 released

13
Making Coal Cleaner
  • Scrubbers
  • Desulfurization systems
  • Clean power plant exhaust
  • Fluidized-bed combustion
  • Mix coal with limestone
  • Produces less pollution
  • Produces more heat

14
Oil and Natural Gas
  • Supply approx. 55 of the energy used in Canada
  • In 2007, Canada consumed 69.6 of its yearly
    total energy production
  • Globally, they supply close to 61.5 of the
    worlds energy

15
Oil
  • Petroleum
  • Crude oil
  • Refined into different products
  • Used in petrochemicals
  • Plastics
  • Fertilizers
  • Synthetic fibers
  • Transportation

16
TransCanada Pipeline
  • Originally constructed in 1958
  • Alaska Pipeline Project will be difficult to
    construct

17
Oil Reserves
  • Unevenly distributed
  • Much in Middle East
  • Continental shelves
  • Underwater areas
  • Surround continents
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Spills problematic
  • Canada has significant oil reserves
  • Global oil production will peak in 2050-2100

18
Environmental Impacts Of Oil
  • CO2 released
  • Acid deposition
  • Photochemical smog
  • Spills

19
The BP Oil Spill
  • April 20, 2010, well head blow out explosion
    occurred killing 11 workers and injuring 17
    others
  • Considered largest spill in US history
  • Environmental disaster
  • Containment effort struggles

20
The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
  • Alaskan coast, 1989
  • Largest in U.S.
  • 10.9 million gallons
  • Many birds, otters died
  • Cleanup?
  • Oil Pollution Act passed

21
Earths Largest Oil Spill
  • 1991 Persian Gulf War
  • 250 million gallons
  • Persian Gulf
  • Oil wells set on fire
  • 2001 Kuwait begins remediation
  • Long recovery time

22
Natural Gas
  • More plentiful than oil
  • Over half in Russia and Iran
  • Use is on the increase
  • Methane, ethane, propane, butane
  • Liquefied petroleum gas
  • Propane and butane
  • Heating, cooking
  • Cogeneration
  • Make electricity and steam

23
Natural Gas
  • Transportation
  • Less pollution emitted
  • U.S. 100,000 vehicles
  • Disadvantages
  • Deposits located far from usage points
  • Transporting is difficult
  • Explosive

24
Nuclear Energy
  • All atoms composed of protons, electrons,
    neutrons
  • Nuclear energy
  • Energy released by nuclear fission or fusion
  • Change the nuclei of atoms

25
Fission vs. Fusion
  • Fission
  • Splitting an atomic nucleus
  • Releases lots of energy
  • Used in nuclear power plants
  • Fusion
  • Two small atoms combined
  • Powers the sun

26
Nuclear Fission
27
Conventional Nuclear Fission
  • Uranium ore
  • Nonrenewable resource
  • Must first be refined enrichment
  • Made into pellets uranium dioxide

28
Conventional Nuclear Fission
  • Pellets placed in fuel rods
  • Rods grouped into fuel assemblies
  • Fission in rods releases
  • heat
  • Heat transforms liquid
  • water to steam
  • Steam generates
  • electricity

29
Nuclear Power Plant
  • Reactor core where fission occurs
  • Steam generator steam produced
  • Turbine generates electricity
  • Condenser cools steam back to liquid

30
Nuclear Power Plant
31
Canadas Nuclear EnergyProduction
  • 22 nuclear reactors in Canada
  • CANDU reactors
  • Developed in Canada
  • Most efficient of all reactors
  • Uses 15 less uranium
  • Worlds largest exporter of uranium

32
Nuclear Energy vs. Coal
33
Nuclear Energy Foreign Oil
  • Nuclear energy used for electricity
  • Most oil used for transportation
  • Technological advances could change this
  • Electric heat pumps
  • Electric vehicles

34
Is Nuclear Power Safe?
  • Accidents can happen
  • Dangerous radiation released
  • Meltdown
  • Metals encasing uranium fuel melt
  • Radiation released

35
Chernobyl
  • Worlds worst nuclear power
  • plant accident
  • Soviet Union, 1986
  • Nuclear reactor
  • exploded
  • Large quantities of
  • radiation released

36
Chernobyl
  • 170,000 permanently moved from homes
  • Long-term effects still being felt
  • Farmland and forests unusable
  • Mothers cannot nurse
  • children
  • High rates of certain
  • cancers, birth defects

37
Radioactive Wastes
  • Low-level
  • Solids, liquids, gases
  • Give off small amounts of radiation
  • High-level
  • Solids, liquids, gases
  • Give off large amounts of radiation
  • Fuel rods, assemblies
  • Highly dangerous

38
Radioactive Waste
  • Spent fuel
  • Used fuel elements
  • Very dangerous, extremely toxic
  • Must be handled and stored properly

39
Yucca Mountain
  • 1982 Nuclear Waste Policy Act
  • Federal government responsible for radioactive
    wastes
  • Must find safe location(s)
  • Yucca Mountain, Nevada
  • Billions spent studying geology
  • Permanent, underground storage

40
Yucca Mountain
  • Transporting waste is a major concern
  • Nevada does not want the waste
  • Decision pending

41
Old Nuclear Power Plants
  • Cannot simply be abandoned or demolished
  • Three options
  • Storage guard it, dismantle later
  • Entombment encase in concrete
  • Dismantle immediate teardown and permanent
    storage

42
Direct Solar Energy
  • Energy directly from the sun
  • Tremendous amount
  • Always available
  • Must be collected

43
Active Solar Heating
  • Collectors absorb solar energy
  • Pumps or fans distribute heat
  • Primarily for heating water

44
Passive Solar Heating
  • No mechanical devices to distribute heat
  • New home design
  • Room temperature
  • is steady
  • Convection
  • Save on heating!

45
A Passive Solar Home
46
Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Cells
  • Convert sunlight into electricity
  • Thin wafers or films
  • No pollution
  • Minimal maintenance

47
Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Cells
  • Can be used in remote areas
  • Good choice for developing countries why?
  • School, home use

48
Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Cells
  • Can look like conventional roofing
  • Prices are coming down
  • Future progress is critical

49
Solar Thermal Electric Generation
  • Backup system needed
  • Very efficient
  • No pollution produced
  • Must be cost-competitive

50
Solar Thermal Electric Generation
  • Suns energy concentrated by mirrors, lenses
  • Heat a working fluid
  • Fluid is circulated to boil water
  • Steam generates electricity

51
Hydrogen As A Fuel Source
  • Could be the fuel of the future
  • Where does the hydrogen come from?
  • Electrolysis
  • Must use renewable fuel source to obtain the
    hydrogen!
  • Few pollutants produced when burned
  • Can be used for transportation

52
Electrical Generation Costs
53
Solar-Generated Hydrogen
  • Use PV cells for electrolysis of water
  • Currently not very efficient
  • Still expensive
  • Would need new distribution system for
    transportation
  • Future development is critical

54
Solar-Generated Hydrogen
  • Fuel cells
  • Electrochemical cell
  • Like a battery
  • Major carmakers working on it

55
Indirect Solar Energy
  • Indirect use of suns energy
  • Biomass, wind power, hydroelectricity

56
Biomass Energy
  • Wood, plants, animal wastes
  • Potentially renewable why?
  • Burned to release energy
  • Half of human population relies on
  • Cooking, heating

57
Biogas
  • Mixture of gases
  • Similar to natural gas
  • Animal wastes
  • Biogas digesters
  • Decompose wastes
  • Use gas for cooking, lighting
  • Solid remains are fertilizer
  • Can also be used to power fuel cells

58
Biomass As A Liquid Fuel
  • Methanol, ethanol
  • Gasohol mix gasoline and ethanol
  • Biodiesel
  • Plant or animal oils
  • Becoming more popular
  • Burns cleaner than regular diesel

59
Wind Energy
  • Fastest growing energy source
  • No waste, emissions
  • Electricity
  • Costs are declining
  • Denmark generates 21 of its electricity
  • Need steady winds
  • Prairie Provinces of Canada

60
Wind Power Is On The Rise!
61
Wind Energy Problems
  • Birds and bats killed by turbines
  • Avoid migration routes
  • Operate only at certain times
  • Monitor the project
  • Visual pollution
  • Maple Ridge, NY
  • Innisfil, Ontario

62
Hydropower
  • Flowing or falling water spins turbines
  • Most efficient way to produce electricity
  • 19 worlds electricity
  • In Canada reservoirs and dams produce 60 of the
    countries electricity

63
Hydropower Problems
  • Damages ecosystem, species
  • Displaces people Three Gorges Dam
  • High construction cost
  • Reduces downstream flow
  • Reservoirs eventually fill in
  • Danger of collapse
  • Degrades river
  • Increase in waterborne disease Schistosomiasis

64
James Bay Project
  • Largest hydroelectric power development in Canada
  • Project received significant opposition
  • Why?

65
Geothermal Energy
  • Use energy from Earths interior
  • Big potential source
  • Electricity
  • Hydrothermal reservoir hot fluid
  • Bring fluid to surface to generate electricity

66
Geothermal Energy
67
Geothermal Energy
  • Emits very few pollutants
  • Is it truly renewable?
  • Land may subside

68
Geothermal Heat Pumps
  • Used for heating and cooling
  • Ground temperature relatively constant
  • Underground pipes carry water
  • Fluids circulate
  • Expensive to install
  • Use is on the increase why?
  • Very efficient!

69
Tidal Energy
  • Use power of the tides to generate electricity
  • France, Russia, China, Canada
  • Very few ideal locations
  • May be damaging to ecosystems

70
Conservation Efficiency
  • Energy conservation
  • Using less energy
  • Reduce use, waste
  • Carpooling
  • Energy efficiency
  • Using less energy for a task
  • More fuel-efficient cars
  • Both very important!

71
Energy Consumption Trends
  • Use is on the increase
  • Greatest increase in developing countries why?

72
Energy-Efficient Technologies
  • Appliances, automobiles, light bulbs, furnaces,
    etc
  • Superinsulated buildings
  • May cost more, but will save money!

73
Automobile Efficiency
  • Fuel efficiency doubled between mid 1970s mid
    1980s
  • Sales of compact and subcompact cars increased
  • Sales of truck SUVs dropped

74
Cogeneration
  • Combined heat and power (CHP)
  • Recycling waste heat
  • Generate electricity, use steam before cooling it
    back down

75
Electric Companies Energy Efficiency
  • Make more money, generate less electricity
  • Incentives for conservation
  • Help consumers save electricity
  • Light bulbs, furnaces
  • Company doesnt have to invest in new power
    generation

76
Electric Companies Energy Efficiency
  • Use cogeneration to save energy
  • Improve electricity grids
  • Some energy lost in transmission
  • Plan for future use

77
Energy Conservation At Home
  • Average household 1500/year on utilities
  • Use energy-efficient technologies
  • Better insulation, windows
  • Seal cracks
  • Replace inefficient appliances

78
Energy Conservation At Home
79
Eco Canada Career Focus
  • Consider a career as an Energy Auditor
  • Measure, record, and evaluate the flow of energy
    in homes, buildings and plants
  • Look for ways energy can be used more efficiently

80
Case Study Hydrogen Economy
  • Hydrogen as an energy source
  • Environmentally cleaner source of energy
  • Potential solution to the worlds reliance on oil
  • Implementation across globe will not be easy
  • Have to separate hydrogen from parent compounds
  • Store and transport the hydrogen
  • Massive investment of money for pipelines,
    plants, distribution networks, automobile
    development and production

81
Case Study Hydrogen Economy
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