Energy Resources: New And Renewable Energy Resources
Video: .mp4 (1280x720, 30 fps(r)) | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2ch | Size: 479 MB
Genre: eLearning Video | Duration: 9 lectures (1 hour, 5 mins) | Language: English
Video: .mp4 (1280x720, 30 fps(r)) | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2ch | Size: 479 MB
Genre: eLearning Video | Duration: 9 lectures (1 hour, 5 mins) | Language: English
New and Renewable energy resources:- advantages and drawbacks, different forms, applications, examples, availability
What you'll learn
New and renewable energy sources
Advantages and disadvantages of different energy sources
Conventional energy sources
Non conventional energy sources
solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, geothermal, biomass, tidal, coal, petroleum energy sources etc..
Requirements
Come with open heart and mind!
Description
Renewable energy, often referred to as clean energy, comes from natural sources or processes that are constantly replenished. For example, sunlight or wind keep shining and blowing, even if their availability depends on time and weather.
While renewable energy is often thought of as a new technology, harnessing nature’s power has long been used for heating, transportation, lighting, and more. Wind has powered boats to sail the seas and windmills to grind grain. The sun has provided warmth during the day and helped kindle fires to last into the evening. But over the past 500 years or so, humans increasingly turned to cheaper, dirtier energy sources such as coal and fracked gas.
Now that we have increasingly innovative and less-expensive ways to capture and retain wind and solar energy, renewables are becoming a more important power source, accounting for more than one-eighth of U.S. generation. The expansion in renewables is also happening at scales large and small, from rooftop solar panels on homes that can sell power back to the grid to giant offshore wind farms. Even some entire rural communities rely on renewable energy for heating and lighting.
As renewable use continues to grow, a key goal will be to modernize America’s electricity grid, making it smarter, more secure, and better integrated across regions.
Who this course is for:
All levels of students