Alternative energy

From New World Encyclopedia
File:Wind turbine lg.jpg
Wind turbines near farm fields

Alternative energy is a term for any nontraditional energy form, source, or technology differing from the current popular forms, sources, or technologies. Today, it is generally used in the context of an alternative to energy deriving from popular fossil fuels and thus includes energy derived from such environmentally preferred sources as solar, water power, biomass, wind, geothermal, ocean thermal, wave action, and tidal action.

The term alternative energy also is used for energy derived from sources and technologies that do not involve the depletion of natural resources or significant harm to the environment. As such, it is used synonymously with "renewable energy" and "green power." While by most definitions there is substantial overlap between energy forms, sources, and technologies that fit into these three categories, and alternative energy often is applied to energy without undesirable environmental consequences or with lessened environmental impact, the three terms also have been delineated differently. Renewable energy generally refers most specifically to energy derived from sustainable natural resources that are constantly replenished within a relatively short time frame (such as deriving from such renewable natural resources as biomass, sunlight, wind, water, and so forth), while "green power" references that subset of renewable energy that involves the least environmental harm. As delineated in the first paragraph, before natural gas gained popularity, this energy source could be classified under the category of alternative energy, but not that of renewable energy.

Definitions

There are a multitude of definitions used for alternative energy.

Source Definition
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Energy derived from nontraditional sources (e.g., compressed natural gas, solar, hydroelectric, wind).[1]
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Third Assessment Report Energy derived from non-fossil fuel sources.[2]
Collins English Dictionary Also called: renewable energy. A form of energy derived from a natural source, such as the sun, wind, tides, or waves.[3]
Random House Dictionary Energy, as solar, wind, or nuclear energy, that can replace or supplement traditional fossil-fuel sources, as coal, oil, and natural gas.[4]
Princeton WordNet Energy derived from sources that do not use up natural resources or harm the environment.[5]
Natural Resources Defense Council Energy that is not popularly used and is usually environmentally sound, such as solar or wind energy (as opposed to fossil fuels).[6]

Other definitions abound. Nelson (2014) notes that coal could have been considered an alternative energy when it replaced wood, noting "alternative energy can be defined as the search for energy improvements in a humane way." Weaver (2014), noting the variety of definitions, offers both a limited definition referring "only to energy that is derived from a source other than [fossil] fuels," which would not include natural gas, and a broader definition "as a term to describe energy sources other than petroleum based," which "allows for inclusion of natural gas fueled vehicles and also eliminates debate over whether electric cars should be considered alternative energy vehicles." Smith and Taylor (2008), in their book Renewable and Alternative Energy Resources, define alternative energy technologies as "those that are not derived from fossils fuels but that also are considered nonrenewable" with renewable energy technologies as those that harness energy from an inexhaustible source" (sun, wind, waves, biomass, falling water, heat generated beneath the surface of the earth).

Many definitions of alternative energy, as noted above, use this term interchangeable with renewable energy. The US Environmental Protection Agency (2014) defines renewable energy as "Energy resources that are naturally replenishing such as biomass, hydro, geothermal, solar, wind, ocean thermal, wave action, and tidal action." The EPA's Green Power Partnership (2013) defines the term as "renewable energy includes resources that rely on fuel sources that restore themselves over short periods of time and do not diminish." The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2001) defines renewables as "energy sources that are, within a short timeframe relative to the earth’s natural cycles, sustainable, and include non-carbon technologies such as solar energy, hydropower, and wind, as well as carbon neutral technologies such as biomass." Gritse

Alternative energy sources, forms, and technologies

Today, the following are among those energies considered as alternative energies:

  • Solar
  • Wind
  • Geothermal
  • Biomass
    • Biofuel
    • Waste
    • Wood
  • Hydroelectric

http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/monthly/pdf/sec10.pdf


  • Biofuel and Ethanol are plant-derived gasoline substitutes for powering vehicles.
  • Nuclear binding energy uses nuclear fission to release energy.
  • Hydrogen is burned and used as clean fuel for spaceships and some cars.

tides

Solar

About half the incoming solar energy reaches the Earth's surface.

Broadly speaking, solar energy is energy from the Sun. About 174 petawatts (PW 1015 watts) of solar radiation reaches the Earth's atmosphere every year (Smil 1991). Approximately 30% is reflected back to space while the rest is absorbed by clouds, oceans, and land masses(for about 3,850,000 exajoules (EJ) per year (Smil 2006)), with roughly 50% reaching the surface of the Earth. Overall, the energy in sunlight yields about 1000 watts per square meter on a cloudless day at noon, and averaged over the entire Earth's surface each square meter collects about 4.2 kilowatt-hours of energy every day (GWSI 2009). This light can be changed into thermal (heat) energy and converted by photosynthesis into chemical energy that can be used to fuel organisms' activities. This solar energy drives climate and the weather and supports virtually all life on Earth.

Part of the 354 MW SEGS solar complex in northern San Bernadino County, California.

In terms of alternative energy, solar energy refers to the energy that is harnessed from solar radiation, using the radiant light and heat from the Sun for practical purposes. The term solar power either is used synonymously with solar energy or is used more specifically to refer to the conversion of sunlight into electricity. Solar energy can be harnessed at different levels around the world, mostly depending on distance from the equator.

In actuality, almost all renewable energies, notably excluding geothermal and tidal, derive their energy from the sun. For example, winds blow partly because of absorption of solar radiation by the Earth's atmosphere. Even non-renewable energy sources such as coal, gas, and oil involve the storing of energy from sunlight preserved under the Earth's crust. Among solar-based renewable resources, wind and wave power, hydroelectricity, and biomass account for over 99.9 percent of the available flow of renewable energy (Smil 2006; Scheer 2002).

Solar energy radiant light and heat from the sun is harnessed using a range of ever-evolving technologies such as solar heating, solar photovoltaics, solar thermal electricity, solar architecture, and artificial photosynthesis (IEA 2011; RSC 2014). Technologies to harness the sun's energy date from the time of the early Greeks, Indian, Native Americans, and Chinese, who warmed their buildings by orienting them toward the sun (Butti and Perlin 1981). British astronomer John Herschel used a solar thermal collector box during an expedition to Africa to cook food (EIA 2014). Modern solar technologies provide heating, lighting, electricity and even flight (USDOE).

There are many technologies for harnessing solar energy within these broad classifications: active, passive, direct and indirect.

  • Active solar systems use electrical and mechanical components such as tracking mechanisms, pumps, and fans to capture sunlight and process it into usable outputs such as heating, lighting or electricity.
  • Passive solar systems use non-mechanical techniques to control the capture of sunlight and distribute this energy into usable outputs such as heating, lighting, cooling, or ventilation. These techniques include selecting materials with favorable thermal properties to absorb and retain energy, designing spaces that naturally circulate air to transfer energy and referencing the position of a building to the sun to enhance energy capture. In some cases passive solar devices can have mechanical movement with the important distinction that this movement is automatic and directly powered by the sun.
  • Direct solar generally refers to technologies or effects that involve a single-step conversion of sunlight that results in a usable form of energy.
  • Indirect solar generally refers to technologies or effects that involve multiple-step transformations of sunlight that result in a usable form of energy.

The collecting of solar radiation and converting it into electricity—the production of solar power—can be done in two two ways: (1) directly using photovoltaics (PV devices) or "solar cells"; or (2) indirectly using solar thermal/electric power plants. The first method involves grouping individual PV cells into panels and arraying panels, ranging from small cells to power watches and calculators to those that power single homes to those that produce electricity in power plants covering many acres. The second way uses concentrated solar power (CSP), whereby lenses or mirrors to concentrate a large area of sunlight, or solar thermal energy, onto a small area. Electrical power is produced when the concentrated light is converted to heat, which drives a heat engine (usually a steam turbine) connected to an electrical power generator or powers a thermochemical reaction. In 2012, there were 12 such power plants in the United States (EIA 2014).

Benefits of solar energy system include the huge potential in terms of energy hitting the earth, the low environmental impact, and the lack of producing carbon dioxide and air pollutants. Limitations preventing the large scale implementation of solar powered energy generation is the inefficiency of current solar technology and the cost. In addition, the amount of sunlight varies depending on weather conditions, location, time of day, and time of year, and the need for a large surface to collect the energy, since it does not deliver concentrated energy at any one place (IEA 2014).

Wind

Trends in the top five countries generating electricity from wind, 1980-2012 (US EIA)

Generally speaking, wind energy is the form of energy created by wind. Wind, the flow of air on a large scale, is caused by differences in atmospheric pressure. When a difference in atmospheric pressure exists, air moves from the higher to the lower pressure area, resulting in winds of various speeds. Globally, the two major driving factors of large-scale wind patterns (the atmospheric circulation) are the differential heating between the equator and the poles (difference in absorption of solar energy leading to buoyancy forces) and the rotation of the planet.

In terms of alternative energy, wind energy refers to the energy that is harnessed from wind for practical purposes. The term wind power is used synonymously as the conversion of wind energy into a useful form of energy, or more specifically as the generation of electricity from the wind. Among ways in which wind energy can be harnessed are wind turbines to make electrical power, windmills for mechanical power, windpumps for water pumping or drainage, or sails to propel ships.

Large wind farms consist of hundreds of individual wind turbines that are connected to the electric power transmission network. For new constructions, onshore wind is an relative inexpensive source of electricity, while small onshore wind farms provide electricity to isolated locations. Utility companies increasingly buy surplus electricity produced by small domestic wind turbines. Offshore wind is steadier and stronger than on land, and offshore farms have less visual impact, but construction and maintenance costs are considerably higher.

Wind power offers a number of benefits as an alternative to fossil fuels. It is plentiful, renewable, widely distributed, clean, produces no greenhouse gas emissions during operation, and uses little land. The effects on the environment are generally less problematic than those from other power sources. Costs are relatively low and once the infrastructure is paid for it is virtually free (Siegel 2012).

The main disadvantage of wind power is the fact that wind is unpredictable, inconsistent, and unsteady, as well as the concern that the full costs of harnessing wind power are not cheap and thus rely on government subsidies to be set up and be competitive. There also are aesthetic concerns, with wind farms being considered by some to be an eyesore, whether restricting the normally picturesque view offshore or in rural areas. Furthermore, there are complaints of noise from turbines, and some communities have been required to shut off their turbines during certain times because of the noise. Older type wind farms have turbines that spin at high speeds and can thus kill wild birds and bats, although this design has changed so newer wind farms largely avoid such a problem (Siegel 2012).

As of 2011, Denmark is generating more than a quarter of its electricity from wind and 83 countries around the world are using wind power to supply the electricity grid (Sawin et al. 2011). In 2010 wind energy production was over 2.5% of total worldwide electricity usage, and growing rapidly at more than 25% per annum.

Geothermal

Geothermal resource map of the United States

In general terms, geothermal energy is thermal energy (the energy that determines the temperature of matter) generated and stored in the Earth. The geothermal energy of the Earth's crust originates from the original formation of the planet (20%) and from radioactive decay of minerals (80%). The geothermal gradient, which is the difference in temperature between the core of the planet and its surface, drives a continuous conduction of thermal energy in the form of heat from the core to the surface.

In terms of alternative energy, geothermal energy is the use of the Earth's internal heat for practical purposes and in particular to boil water for heating buildings or generating electricity. Geothermal energy is produced by tapping into the thermal energy created and stored within the earth. It is considered sustainable because that thermal energy is constantly replenished (Ryback 2007). However, the science of geothermal energy generation is still young and developing economic viability. Several entities, such as the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories, conduct research toward the goal of establishing a proven science around geothermal energy. The International Centre for Geothermal Research (IGC), a German geosciences research organization, is largely focused on geothermal energy development research.

In the United States, geothermal is one of the renewable energy resources used to produce electricity, but its growth is slower than that of wind and solar energy development and a November 2011 report noted that it produced just 0.4% of the electricity from all sectors nationally during the first 8 months of that year, with 10,898 million kilowatthours (kWh) produced during that time. However, about 5% of the electricity generated in California was produced from geothermal, although there are significant geothermal resources that could be utilized (EIA 2011).

Geothermal thermal energy is used to generate electricity typically via a well that is drilled into an underground reservoir of water that can be as hot as 371 degrees Celsius (700 Fahrenheit). At the surface, a turbine is turned using the trapped steam. Heat pumps are used to move fluids through pipelines buried underground at depths where the temperature does not change much and delivered to a home or commercial building. During the summer, this pipeline can pull heat out of a building and uses cooler fluid to cool the building. Geothermal water also is found in geysers or hot springs on the Earth's surface (EIA 2011).

Geothermal provides a clear, sustainable, environmentally friendly and substantial resource. However, it also faces challenges in that geothermal plants generally are site-specific and limited to regions with accessible deposits of high temperature ground water, the completing of a geothermal plant takes significant time (four to eight years) versus the times for wind or solar, and there is a lack of transmission lines (EIA 2011).

Biomass

http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/monthly/pdf/sec10.pdf


Biofuel

Waste

Ethanol biofuels

Main article: Ethanol

As the primary source of biofuels in North America, many organizations are conducting research in the area of ethanol production. On the Federal level, the USDA conducts a large amount of research regarding ethanol production in the United States. Much of this research is targeted toward the effect of ethanol production on domestic food markets.[7]

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory has conducted various ethanol research projects, mainly in the area of cellulosic ethanol.[8] Cellulosic ethanol has many benefits over traditional corn based-ethanol. It does not take away or directly conflict with the food supply because it is produced from wood, grasses, or non-edible parts of plants.[9] Moreover, some studies have shown cellulosic ethanol to be more cost effective and economically sustainable than corn-based ethanol.[10] Sandia National Laboratories conducts in-house cellulosic ethanol research [11] and is also a member of the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), a research institute founded by the United States Department of Energy with the goal of developing cellulosic biofuels.[12]

Other Biofuels

Main article: Biofuel

From 1978 to 1996, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory experimented with using algae as a biofuels source in the "Aquatic Species Program.”[citation needed] A self-published article by Michael Briggs, at the University of New Hampshire Biofuels Group, offers estimates for the realistic replacement of all motor vehicle fuel with biofuels by utilizing algae that have a natural oil content greater than 50%, which Briggs suggests can be grown on algae ponds at wastewater treatment plants.[citation needed] This oil-rich algae can then be extracted from the system and processed into biofuels, with the dried remainder further reprocessed to create ethanol.

The production of algae to harvest oil for biofuels has not yet been undertaken on a commercial scale, but feasibility studies have been conducted to arrive at the above yield estimate. In addition to its projected high yield, algaculture— unlike food crop-based biofuels — does not entail a decrease in food production, since it requires neither farmland nor fresh water. Many companies are pursuing algae bio-reactors for various purposes, including scaling up biofuels production to commercial levels.[13][14]

Several groups in various sectors are conducting research on Jatropha curcas, a poisonous shrub-like tree that produces seeds considered by many to be a viable source of biofuels feedstock oil.[15] Much of this research focuses on improving the overall per acre oil yield of Jatropha through advancements in genetics, soil science, and horticultural practices. SG Biofuels, a San Diego-based Jatropha developer, has used molecular breeding and biotechnology to produce elite hybrid seeds of Jatropha that show significant yield improvements over first generation varieties.[16] The Center for Sustainable Energy Farming (CfSEF) is a Los Angeles-based non-profit research organization dedicated to Jatropha research in the areas of plant science, agronomy, and horticulture. Successful exploration of these disciplines is projected to increase Jatropha farm production yields by 200-300% in the next ten years.[17]


Hydrogen

Over $1 billion of federal money has been spent on the research and development of hydrogen fuel in the United States.[18] Both the National Renewable Energy Laboratory [19] and Sandia National Laboratories [20] have departments dedicated to hydrogen research.

Lightning

Since the late 1980s, there have been several attempts to investigate the possibility of harvesting energy from lightning. It has been proposed that the energy contained in lightning be used to generate hydrogen from water, or to harness the energy from rapid heating of water due to lightning,[21] or to use inductors spaced far enough away so that a safe fraction of the energy might be captured.[22] In the summer of 2007, an alternative energy company called Alternate Energy Holdings, Inc. (AEHI) unsuccessfully tested a method for capturing the energy in lightning bolts.[23]

History

Offshore wind turbines near Copenhagen

Historians of economies have examined the key transitions to alternative energies and regard the transitions as pivotal in bringing about significant economic change.[24][25][26] Prior to the shift to an alternative energy, supplies of the dominant energy type became erratic, accompanied by rapid increases in energy prices.

Coal as an alternative to wood

Historian Norman F. Cantor describes how in the late medieval period, coal was the new alternative fuel to save the society from overuse of the dominant fuel, wood:

"Europeans had lived in the midst of vast forests throughout the earlier medieval centuries. After 1250 they became so skilled at deforestation that by 1500 C.E. they were running short of wood for heating and cooking... By 1500 Europe was on the edge of a fuel and nutritional disaster, [from] which it was saved in the sixteenth century only by the burning of soft coal and the cultivation of potatoes and maize. "[27]

Petroleum as an alternative to whale oil

Whale oil was the dominant form of lubrication and fuel for lamps in the early 19th century, but the depletion of the whale stocks by mid century caused whale oil prices to skyrocket setting the stage for the adoption of petroleum which was first commercialized in Pennsylvania in 1859.[28]

Alcohol as an alternative to fossil fuels

In 1917, Alexander Graham Bell advocated ethanol from corn, wheat and other foods as an alternative to coal and oil, stating that the world was in measurable distance of depleting these fuels. For Bell, the problem requiring an alternative was lack of renewability of orthodox energy sources.[29] Since the 1970s, Brazil has had an ethanol fuel program which has allowed the country to become the world's second largest producer of ethanol (after the United States) and the world's largest exporter.[30] Brazil’s ethanol fuel program uses modern equipment and cheap sugar cane as feedstock, and the residual cane-waste (bagasse) is used to process heat and power.[31] There are no longer light vehicles in Brazil running on pure gasoline. By the end of 2008 there were 35,000 filling stations throughout Brazil with at least one ethanol pump.[32]

Cellulosic ethanol can be produced from a diverse array of feedstocks, and involves the use of the whole crop. This new approach should increase yields and reduce the carbon footprint because the amount of energy-intensive fertilizers and fungicides will remain the same, for a higher output of usable material.[33][34] As of 2008, there are nine commercial cellulosic ethanol plants which are either operating, or under construction, in the United States.[35]

Second-generation biofuels technologies are able to manufacture biofuels from inedible biomass and could hence prevent conversion of food into fuel." [36] As of July 2010, there is one commercial second-generation (2G) ethanol plant Inbicon Biomass Refinery, which is operating in Denmark.[37]

Coal gasification as an alternative to petroleum

In the 1970s, President Jimmy Carter's administration advocated coal gasification as an alternative to expensive imported oil. The program, including the Synthetic Fuels Corporation was scrapped when petroleum prices plummeted in the 1980s. The carbon footprint and environmental impact of coal gasification are both very high.


Enabling technologies

Heat pumps and Thermal energy storage are technologies which use energy sources that normally can't be obtained. Also, heat pumps have the advantage of leveraging electrical power (or in some cases mechanical or thermal power) by using it to extract additional energy from a low quality source (such as sea or lake water, the ground or the air).

Thermal storage technologies allow heat or cold to be stored for periods of time ranging from diurnal to interseasonal, and can involve storage of sensible energy (i.e. by changing the temperature of a medium) or latent energy (e.g. through phase changes of a medium (i.e. changes from solid to liquid or vice versa), such as between water and slush or ice). Energy sources can be natural (via solar-thermal collectors, or dry cooling towers used to collect winter's cold), waste energy (such as from HVAC equipment, industrial processes or power plants), or surplus energy (such as seasonally from hydropower projects or intermittently from wind farms). The Drake Landing Solar Community (Alberta, Canada) is illustrative. borehole thermal energy storage allows the community to get 97% of its year-round heat from solar collectors on the garage roofs, which most of the heat collected in summer.[38][39] The storages can be insulated tanks, borehole clusters in substrates ranging from gravel to bedrock, deep aquifers, or shallow pits that are lined and insulated. Some applications require inclusion of a heat pump.


Ecologically friendly alternatives

Renewable energy sources such as biomass are sometimes regarded as an alternative to ecologically harmful fossil fuels. Renewables are not inherently alternative energies for this purpose. For example, the Netherlands, once leader in use of palm oil as a biofuel, has suspended all subsidies for palm oil due to the scientific evidence that their use "may sometimes create more environmental harm than fossil fuels".[40] The Netherlands government and environmental groups are trying to trace the origins of imported palm oil, to certify which operations produce the oil in a responsible manner.[40] Regarding biofuels from foodstuffs, the realization that converting the entire grain harvest of the US would only produce 16% of its auto fuel needs, and the decimation of Brazil's Template:CO2 absorbing tropical rain forests to make way for biofuel production has made it clear that placing energy markets in competition with food markets results in higher food prices and insignificant or negative impact on energy issues such as global warming or dependence on foreign energy.[41] Recently, alternatives to such undesirable sustainable fuels are being sought, such as commercially viable sources of cellulosic ethanol.

Relatively new concepts for alternative energy

Carbon-neutral and negative fuels

Carbon-neutral fuels are synthetic fuels (including methane, gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel or ammonia[42]) produced by hydrogenating waste carbon dioxide recycled from power plant flue-gas emissions, recovered from automotive exhaust gas, or derived from carbonic acid in seawater.[43] Commercial fuel synthesis companies suggest they can produce synthetic fuels for less than petroleum fuels when oil costs more than $55 per barrel.[44] Renewable methanol (RM) is a fuel produced from hydrogen and carbon dioxide by catalytic hydrogenation where the hydrogen has been obtained from water electrolysis. It can be blended into transportation fuel or processed as a chemical feedstock.[45]

The George Olah carbon dioxide recycling plant operated by Carbon Recycling International in Grindavík, Iceland has been producing 2 million liters of methanol transportation fuel per year from flue exhaust of the Svartsengi Power Station since 2011.[46] It has the capacity to produce 5 million liters per year.[47] A 250 kilowatt methane synthesis plant was constructed by the Center for Solar Energy and Hydrogen Research (ZSW) at Baden-Württemberg and the Fraunhofer Society in Germany and began operating in 2010. It is being upgraded to 10 megawatts, scheduled for completion in autumn, 2012.[48][49] Audi has constructed a carbon-neutral liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in Werlte, Germany.[50] The plant is intended to produce transportation fuel to offset LNG used in their A3 Sportback g-tron automobiles, and can keep 2,800 metric tons of CO2 out of the environment per year at its initial capacity.[51] Other commercial developments are taking place in Columbia, South Carolina,[52] Camarillo, California,[53] and Darlington, England.[54]

Template:Green economics sidebar

Such fuels are considered carbon-neutral because they do not result in a net increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases.[55] To the extent that synthetic fuels displace fossil fuels, or if they are produced from waste carbon or seawater carbonic acid,[56] and their combustion is subject to carbon capture at the flue or exhaust pipe, they result in negative carbon dioxide emission and net carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere, and thus constitute a form of greenhouse gas remediation.[57]

Such renewable fuels alleviate the costs and dependency issues of imported fossil fuels without requiring either electrification of the vehicle fleet or conversion to hydrogen or other fuels, enabling continued compatible and affordable vehicles.[58] Carbon-neutral fuels offer relatively low cost energy storage, alleviating the problems of wind and solar intermittency, and they enable distribution of wind, water, and solar power through existing natural gas pipelines.[58]

Nighttime wind power is considered the most economical form of electrical power with which to synthesize fuel, because the load curve for electricity peaks sharply during the warmest hours of the day, but wind tends to blow slightly more at night than during the day, so, the price of nighttime wind power is often much less expensive than any alternative.[58] Germany has built a 250 kilowatt synthetic methane plant which they are scaling up to 10 megawatts.[48][49][59]

Algae fuel

Algae fuel is a biofuel which is derived from algae. During photosynthesis, algae and other photosynthetic organisms capture carbon dioxide and sunlight and convert it into oxygen and biomass. The benefits of algal biofuel are that it can be produced industrially, thereby obviating the use of arable land and food crops (such as soy, palm, and canola), and that it has a very high oil yield as compared to all other sources of biofuel.

Biomass briquettes

Biomass briquettes are being developed in the developing world as an alternative to charcoal. The technique involves the conversion of almost any plant matter into compressed briquettes that typically have about 70% the calorific value of charcoal. There are relatively few examples of large scale briquette production. One exception is in North Kivu, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where forest clearance for charcoal production is considered to be the biggest threat to Mountain Gorilla habitat. The staff of Virunga National Park have successfully trained and equipped over 3500 people to produce biomass briquettes, thereby replacing charcoal produced illegally inside the national park, and creating significant employment for people living in extreme poverty in conflict affected areas. [60]

Biogas digestion

Biogas digestion deals with harnessing the methane gas that is released when waste breaks down. This gas can be retrieved from garbage or sewage systems. Biogas digesters are used to process methane gas by having bacteria break down biomass in an anaerobic environment. [61] The methane gas that is collected and refined can be used as an energy source for various products.

Biological Hydrogen Production

Hydrogen gas is a completely clean burning fuel; its only by-product is water.[62] It also contains relatively high amount of energy compared with other fuels due to its chemical structure.[63]

2H2 + O2 → 2H2O + High Energy

High Energy + 2H2O → 2H2 + O2

This requires a high-energy input, making commercial hydrogen very inefficient.[64] Use of a biological vector as a means to split water, and therefore produce hydrogen gas, would allow for the only energy input to be solar radiation. Biological vectors can include bacteria or more commonly algae. This process is known as biological hydrogen production.[65] It requires the use of single celled organisms to create hydrogen gas through fermentation. Without the presence of oxygen, also known as an anaerobic environment, regular cellular respiration cannot take place and a process known as fermentation takes over. A major by-product of this process is hydrogen gas. If we could implement this on a large scale, then we could take sunlight, nutrients and water and create hydrogen gas to be used as a dense source of energy.[66] Large-scale production has proven difficult. It was not until 1999 that we were able to even induce these anaerobic conditions by sulfur deprivation.[67] Since the fermentation process is an evolutionary back up, turned on during stress, the cells would die after a few days. In 2000, a two-stage process was developed to take the cells in and out of anaerobic conditions and therefore keep them alive.[68] For the last ten years, finding a way to do this on a large-scale has been the main goal of research. Careful work is being done to ensure an efficient process before large-scale production, however once a mechanism is developed, this type of production could solve our energy needs.[69]

Floating wind farms

Floating wind farms are similar to a regular wind farm, but the difference is that they float in the middle of the ocean. Offshore wind farms can be placed in water up to 40 meters (130 ft) deep, whereas floating wind turbines can float in water up to 700 meters (2,300 ft) deep.[70] The advantage of having a floating wind farm is to be able to harness the winds from the open ocean. Without any obstructions such as hills, trees and buildings, winds from the open ocean can reach up to speeds twice as fast as coastal areas.[70][71]

Investing in alternative energy

As an emerging economic sector, there are limited investment opportunities in alternative energy available to the general public. The public can buy shares of alternative energy companies from various stock markets, with wildly volatile returns. The recent IPO of SolarCity demonstrates the nascent nature of this sector- within a few weeks, it already had achieved the second highest market cap within the alternative energy sector.[72]

Investors can also choose to invest in ETFs (exchange-traded funds) that track an alternative energy index, such as the WilderHill New Energy Index.[73] Additionally, there are a number of mutual funds, such as Calvert's Global Alternative Energy Mutual Fund [74] that are a bit more proactive in choosing the selected investments.

Recently, Mosaic Inc. launched an online platform allowing residents of California and New York to invest directly in solar.[75] Investing in solar projects had previously been limited to accredited investors, such as Warren Buffett,[76] or a small number of willing banks.

Over the last three years publicly traded alternative energy companies have been very volatile, with some 2007 returns in excess of 100%, some 2008 returns down 90% or more, and peak-to-trough returns in 2009 again over 100%.[citation needed] In general there are three subsegments of “alternative” energy investment: solar energy, wind energy and hybrid electric vehicles. Alternative energy sources which are renewable, free and have lower carbon emissions than what we have now are wind energy, solar energy, geothermal energy, and bio fuels. Each of these four segments involve very different technologies and investment concerns.

For example, photovoltaic solar energy is based on semiconductor processing and accordingly, benefits from steep cost reductions similar to those realized in the microprocessor industry (i.e., driven by larger scale, higher module efficiency, and improving processing technologies). PV solar energy is perhaps the only energy technology whose electricity generation cost could be reduced by half or more over the next 5 years. Better and more efficient manufacturing process and new technology such as advanced thin film solar cell is a good example of that helps to reduce industry cost.[77]

The economics of solar PV electricity are highly dependent on silicon pricing and even companies whose technologies are based on other materials (e.g., First Solar) are impacted by the balance of supply and demand in the silicon market.[citation needed] In addition, because some companies sell completed solar cells on the open market (e.g., Q-Cells), this creates a low barrier to entry for companies that want to manufacture solar modules, which in turn can create an irrational pricing environment.

In contrast, because wind power has been harnessed for over 100 years, its underlying technology is relatively stable. Its economics are largely determined by siting (e.g., how hard the wind blows and the grid investment requirements) and the prices of steel (the largest component of a wind turbine) and select composites (used for the blades). Because current wind turbines are often in excess of 100 meters high, logistics and a global manufacturing platform are major sources of competitive advantage. These issues and others were explored in a research report by Sanford Bernstein. Some of its key conclusions are shown here.[40]

Alternative energy in transportation

Due to steadily rising gas prices in 2008 with the US national average price per gallon of regular unleaded gas rising above $4.00 at one point,[78] there has been a steady movement towards developing higher fuel efficiency and more alternative fuel vehicles for consumers. In response, many smaller companies have rapidly increased research and development into radically different ways of powering consumer vehicles. Hybrid and battery electric vehicles are commercially available and are gaining wider industry and consumer acceptance worldwide.[79]

For example, Nissan USA introduced the world's first mass-production Electric Vehicle "Nissan Leaf".[80] A plug-in hybrid car, the "Chevrolet Volt" also has been produced, using an electric motor to drive the wheels, and a small four-cylinder engine to generate additional electricity.[81]

Making Alternative Energy Mainstream

Before alternative energy becomes main-stream there are a few crucial obstacles that it must overcome: First there must be increased understanding of how alternative energies work and why they are beneficial; secondly the availability components for these systems must increase; and lastly the pay-off time must be decreased.

For example, electric vehicles (EV) and Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEV) are on the rise. These vehicles depend heavily on an effective charging infrastructure such as a smart grid infrastructure to be able to implement electricity as mainstream alternative energy for future transportations.[82]

Alternative Energy Research

There are numerous organizations within the academic, federal, and commercial sectors conducting large scale advanced research in the field of alternative energy. This research spans several areas of focus across the alternative energy spectrum. Most of the research is targeted at improving efficiency and increasing overall energy yields.[83]

Multiple federally supported research organizations have focused on alternative energy in recent years. Two of the most prominent of these labs are Sandia National Laboratories and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), both of which are funded by the United States Department of Energy and supported by various corporate partners.[84] Sandia has a total budget of $2.4 billion [85] while NREL has a budget of $375 million.[86]


Disadvantages

The generation of alternative energy on the scale needed to replace fossil energy, in an effort to reverse global climate change, is likely to have significant negative environmental impacts. For example, biomass energy generation would have to increase 7-fold to supply current primary energy demand, and up to 40-fold by 2100 given economic and energy growth projections.[87] Humans already appropriate 30 to 40% of all photosynthetically fixed carbon worldwide, indicating that expansion of additional biomass harvesting is likely to stress ecosystems, in some cases precipitating collapse and extinction of animal species that have been deprived of vital food sources.[88][89] The total amount of energy capture by vegetation in the United States each year is around 58 quads (61.5 EJ), about half of which is already harvested as agricultural crops and forest products. The remaining biomass is needed to maintain ecosystem functions and diversity.[90] Since annual energy use in the United States is ca. 100 quads, biomass energy could supply only a very small fraction. To supply the current worldwide energy demand solely with biomass would require more than 10% of the Earth’s land surface, which is comparable to the area use for all of world agriculture (i.e., ca. 1500 million hectares), indicating that further expansion of biomass energy generation will be difficult without precipitating an ethical conflict, given current world hunger statistics, over growing plants for biofuel versus food.[91][92]

Given environmental concerns (e.g., fish migration, destruction of sensitive aquatic ecosystems, etc.) about building new dams to capture hydroelectric energy, further expansion of hydropower in the United States is unlikely. Windpower, if deployed on the large scale necessary to substitute fossil energy, is likely to face public resistance. If 100% of U.S. energy demand were to be supplied by windmills, about 80 million hectares (i.e., more than 40% of all available farmland in the United States) would have to be covered with large windmills (50m hub height and 250 to 500 m apart).[93] It is therefore not surprising that the major environmental impact of wind power is related to land use and less to wildlife (birds, bats, etc.) mortality. Unless only a relatively small fraction of electricity is generated by windmills in remote locations, it is unlikely that the public will tolerate large windfarms given concerns about blade noise and aesthetics.[94][95]

There are additional issues that may arise from switching to alternative energy. “Increasing the nation’s use of natural gas for electricity generation could result in adverse economic consequences”, especially since “natural gas currently costs about four times more than coal”.[96] Furthermore, if there were a widespread switching to natural gas from coal some countries would become increasingly dependent on international supplies. Also, “large-scale fuel switching would require substantial investments in pipeline storage and storage capacity and new terminals to process imported natural gas”.[96] There is also the question of whether to convert existing coal-burning plants or to construct new ones. “Burning natural gas at an existing coal plant would require a pipeline with the ability to meet the plant’s fuel supply requirements”.[96] It would also require “expansion of interstate and intrastate pipelines to transport increased volumes of natural gas” [96] Overall it would be more feasible and cost-effective to construct new natural gas units than to switch coal-burning plants.


Notes

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), "Glossary of climate change terms," US Environmental Protection Agency (2013). Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), "Appendix II Glossary," IPCC Third Assessment Report Working Group III: Mitigation (2001). Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  3. Collins English Dictionary, "Alternative energy," Collins English Dictionary, 10th Edition (2009). Retrieved January 14, 2014, from Dictionary.com.
  4. Random House Dictionary, "Alternative energy," Random House Dictionary (2013). Retrieved January 14, 2014, from Dictionary.com.
  5. WordNet, "Alternative energy," WordNet (2014). Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  6. National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), "Glossary of environmental terms," National Resources Defense Council (2014). Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  7. American Coalition for Ethanol (2008-06-02). Responses to Questions from Senator Bingaman. American Coalition for Ethanol. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
  8. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (2007-03-02). Research Advantages: Cellulosic Ethanol. National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
  9. M.R. Schmer, K.P. Vogel, R.B. Mitchell, R.K. Perrin (2008). Net energy of cellulosic ethanol from switchgrass. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105 (2): 464–469.
  10. Charles E. Wyman (2007). What is (and is not) vital to advancing cellulosic ethanol. Trends in Biotechnology 25 (4): 153–157.
  11. Sandia National Laboratories. Biomass. Sandia National Laboratories. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  12. Joint BioEnergy Initiative. About JBEI. Sandia National Laboratories. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  13. Valcent Products Inc. Develops "Clean Green" Vertical Bio-Reactor. Valcent Products. Archived from the original on 18 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  14. Technology: High Yield Carbon Recycling. GreenFuel Technologies Corporation. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  15. B.N. Divakara, H.D. Upadhyaya, S.P. Wani, C.L. Laxmipathi Gowda (2010). Biology and genetic improvement of Jatropha curcas L.: A review. Applied Energy 87 (3): 732–742.
  16. Biofuels Digest (2011-05-16). Jatropha blooms again: SG Biofuels secures 250K acres for hybrids. Biofuels Digest. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
  17. Biofuels Magazine (2011-04-11). Energy Farming Methods Mature, Improve. Biofuels Magazine. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
  18. Jeff Wise. The Truth about hydrogen. Popular Mechanics. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  19. NREL. Hydrogen. NREL. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  20. Sandia. Hydrogen. Sandia. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  21. Knowledge, Dr., "Why can't we capture lightning and convert it into usable electricity?", October 29, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  22. Helman, D.S. (2011). Catching lightning for alternative energy. Renewable Energy 36: 1311–1314.
  23. Glassie, John, "Lightning Farms", The New York Times, December 9, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  24. Gregory Clark (University of California, Davis, Economics) (April 2007). Coal and the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1869. Clark and Jacks specifically refer to 18th century "alternative energy"
  25. Dr Roger White, Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity, University of Birmingham (2006-05-13). Trees and Woods: Myths and Realities. Note: Dr. White specifically refers to coal as a 17th century alternative fuel in this paper.
  26. Dr. Douglas B. Reynolds (economics). Energy Grades and Historic Economic Growth.
  27. Norman F. Cantor (1993). The Civilization of the Middle Ages: The Life and death of a Civilization. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-092553-6. 
  28. From Old Dartmouth to New Bedford, Whaling Metropolis of the World. Old Dartmouth Historical Society. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  29. Alexander Graham Bell (1917). Prizes for the Inventor: Some of the Problems Awaiting Solution. National Geographic Society. Retrieved 2008-12-14. “In relation to coal and oil, the world's annual consumption has become so enormous that we are now actually within measurable distance of the end of the supply. What shall we do when we have no more coal or oil! .... There is, however, one other source of fuel supply which may perhaps this problem of the future. Alcohol makes a beautiful, clean and efficient fuel, and where not intended for human consumption can be manufactured very cheaply from corn stalks and in fact from almost any vegetable matter capable of fermentation.” 
  30. Industry Statistics: Annual World Ethanol Production by Country. Renewable Fuels Association. Archived from the original on 2008-04-08. Retrieved 2008-05-02.
  31. Macedo Isaias, M. Lima Verde Leal and J. Azevedo Ramos da Silva (2004). Assessment of greenhouse gas emissions in the production and use of fuel ethanol in Brazil (PDF). Secretariat of the Environment, Government of the State of São Paulo. Archived from the original on 28 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
  32. Daniel Budny and Paulo Sotero, editor (April 2007). Brazil Institute Special Report: The Global Dynamics of Biofuels (PDF). Brazil Institute of the Woodrow Wilson Center. Archived from the original on 28 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-03.
  33. Biofuels look to the next generation
  34. Cellulosic Ethanol: Not Just Any Liquid Fuel
  35. Building Cellulose
  36. bioenergywiki.net:Second-generation biofuels
  37. Inbicon - about the plant
  38. Wong, Bill (June 28, 2011), "Drake Landing Solar Community", IDEA/CDEA District Energy/CHP 2011 Conference, Toronto, pp. 1–30, retrieved 21 April 2013
  39. Wong B., Thornton J. (2013). Integrating Solar & Heat Pumps. Renewable Heat Workshop.
  40. 40.0 40.1 40.2 Elisabeth Rosenthal (2007-01-31). Once a Dream Fuel, Palm Oil May Be an Eco-Nightmare. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "pal" defined multiple times with different content
  41. Lester R. Brown (2007-06-13). Biofuels Blunder:Massive Diversion of U.S. Grain to Fuel Cars is Raising World Food Prices, Risking Political Instability.
  42. Leighty and Holbrook (2012) "Running the World on Renewables: Alternatives for Transmission and Low-cost Firming Storage of Stranded Renewables as Hydrogen and Ammonia Fuels via Underground Pipelines" Proceedings of the ASME 2012 International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition November 9-15, 2012, Houston, Texas
  43. Graves, Christopher (2011). Sustainable hydrocarbon fuels by recycling CO2 and H2O with renewable or nuclear energy. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 15 (1): 1–23. (Review.)
  44. Holte, Laura L.; Doty, Glenn N. ; McCree, David L. ; Doty, Judy M. ; Doty, F. David (2010). "Sustainable Transportation Fuels From Off-peak Wind Energy, CO2 and Water". {{{booktitle}}}, Phoenix, Arizona: American Society of Mechanical Engineers. URL accessed September 7, 2012.
  45. First Commercial Plant. Carbon Recycling International. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  46. "George Olah CO2 to Renewable Methanol Plant, Reykjanes, Iceland" (Chemicals-Technology.com)
  47. "First Commercial Plant" (Carbon Recycling International)
  48. 48.0 48.1 Center for Solar Energy and Hydrogen Research Baden-Württemberg (2011). Verbundprojekt 'Power-to-Gas' (in German). zsw-bw.de. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  49. 49.0 49.1 Center for Solar Energy and Hydrogen Research (July 24, 2012). Bundesumweltminister Altmaier und Ministerpräsident Kretschmann zeigen sich beeindruckt von Power-to-Gas-Anlage des ZSW (in German). zsw-bw.de. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  50. Okulski, Travis, "Audi's Carbon Neutral E-Gas Is Real And They're Actually Making It", June 26, 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  51. Rousseau, Steve, "Audi's New E-Gas Plant Will Make Carbon-Neutral Fuel", June 25, 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  52. Doty Windfuels. Windfuels.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  53. CoolPlanet Energy Systems. Coolplanetbiofuels.com (2012-10-24). Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  54. Air Fuel Synthesis, Ltd. Airfuelsynthesis.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  55. Lackner, Klaus S. (2012). The urgency of the development of CO2 capture from ambient air. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 (33): 13156–62.
  56. Eisaman, Matthew D. (2012). CO2 extraction from seawater using bipolar membrane electrodialysis. Energy and Environmental Science 5 (6): 7346–52.
  57. Goeppert, Alain (2012). Air as the renewable carbon source of the future: an overview of CO2 capture from the atmosphere. Energy and Environmental Science 5 (7): 7833–53. (Review.)
  58. 58.0 58.1 58.2 Pearson, R.J. (2012). Energy Storage via Carbon-Neutral Fuels Made From CO2, Water, and Renewable Energy. Proceedings of the IEEE 100 (2): 440–60. (Review.)
  59. Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft (May 5, 2010). Storing green electricity as natural gas. fraunhofer.de. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  60. Biomass Briquettes (27 August 2009). Retrieved 19 February 2009.
  61. Biogas Technology (27 March 2009). Archived from the original on 25 May 2009. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  62. Hijikata, Tsuneo. 2001. Research and Development of International Clean Energy Network Using Hydrogen Energy. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy; 27: 115-129
  63. P. 12, BMW Group Clean Energy ZEV Symposium, September 2006
  64. Ghirardi ML, Togasaki RK, Seibert M (1997). Oxygen Sensitivity of Algal H2-Production. Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology 63: 141–51.
  65. Radmer R, Kok B (1977). Photosynthesis: Limited Yields, Unlimited Dreams. BioScience 29: 599–605.
  66. Gaffron H, Rubin J (1942). Fermentative and Photochemical Production of Hydrogen in Algae. Journal of General Physiology 26 (2): 219–240.
  67. Melis A, Neidhardt J, Benemann JR (1999). Dunaliella salina (Chlorophyta) with Small Chlorophyll Antenna Sizes Exhibit Higher Photosynthetic Productivities and Photon Use Efficiencies Than Normally Pigmented Cells. Journal of Applied Physiology 10: 515–52.
  68. Melis A, Happe T (2001). Hydrogen Production — Green Algae as a Source of Energy. Plant Physiology 127 (3): 740–8.
  69. Doebbe A, Rupprecht J, Beckmann J, Mussgnug JH, Hallmann A, Hankamer B, Kruse O (2007). Functional Integration of the HUP1 Hexose Symporter Gene into the Genome of C. reinhardtii: Impacts on Biological H2 Production. Journal of Biotechnology 131 (1): 27–33.
  70. 70.0 70.1 Horton, Jennifer. (19 August 2008). 5 Wacky Forms of Alternative Energy. Archived from the original on 22 June 2009. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
  71. Hywind by Statoil (11 February 2009). Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  72. SolarCity Stock Market Cap Makes It No. 2 Solar Firm.
  73. WilderHill New Energy Global Innovation Index.
  74. Calvert Global Alternative Energy Fund (CGAEX).
  75. Solar Mosaic fully crowd funds its new solar projects in less than 24 hours.
  76. New Ways to Invest in Solar Like Buffett.
  77. http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/is-solar-energy-really-ready-to-rumble-19153.aspx
  78. Gas Prices post third straight record, CNN Money
  79. Foster, Peter, "China takes on America in electric car race..", Telegraph Media Group Limited, 24 Mar 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-11.
  80. http://www.nissanusa.com/leaf-electric-car/index#/leaf-electric-car/index
  81. Transform Your Drive.
  82. http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/electric_vehicles_the_smart_grid_s_moving_target.aspx
  83. S.C.E. Jupe, A. Michiorri, P.C. Taylor (2007). Increasing the energy yield of generation from new and renewable energy sources. Renewable Energy 14 (2): 37–62.
  84. Defense-scale supercomputing comes to alternative energy research. [[Sandia National Laboratories]]. Retrieved 2012-04-016.
  85. Sandia National Laboratories. Sandia National Laboratories. Retrieved 2012-04-016.
  86. *Chakrabarty, Gargi, April 16th, 2009. "Stimulus leaves NREL in cold" Denver Post”
  87. Huesemann, Michael H., and Joyce A. Huesemann (2011). Technofix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us or the Environment, “Challenge #1: Serious Environmental Impacts of Large-scale Renewable Energy Generation”, New Society Publishers, ISBN 0865717044, pp. 125-133.
  88. Rojstaczer, S., S.M. Sterling, and N.J. Moore (2001). “Human appropriation of photosynthesis products”, Science, 294:2549-2552.
  89. Vitousek, P.M., P.R. Ehrlich, A.H. Ehrlich, and P.A. Matson (1986). “Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis”, BioScience 36(6):368-373.
  90. Pimentel, D., et al. (1994). “Achieving a secure energy future: environmental and economic issues”, Ecological Economics, 9:201-219.
  91. Hoffert, M.I., et al. (2002). “Advanced technology paths to global climate change stability: energy for a greenhouse planet”, Science, 298:981-987.
  92. Nakicenovic, N., A. Gruebler, and A. McDonald (1998). Global Energy Perspective, Cambridge University Press
  93. Elliott, D.L., L.L. Wendell, and G.L. Gower (1992), “Wind energy potential in the United States considering environmental and land use exclusions”, In: Proceedings of the Biennial Congress of the International Solar Energy Society – Solar World Congress in Denver, Colorado, edited by M.E. Ardan, S.M.A. Burley, and M. Coleman, Pergamon, Oxford, UK.
  94. Elliott, D., (1997). Energy, Society, and Environment – Technology for a Sustainable Future, Chapter 11, “Case Study: Public Reaction of UK Windfarms”, Routledge
  95. Wuestenhagen, R., M. Welsink, and M.J. Buerer (2007). “Social acceptance of renewable energy innovations – an introduction to the concept”, Energy Policy, 35:2683-2691.
  96. 96.0 96.1 96.2 96.3 The US Senate and House of Representatives. (2008). “Economic and Other Implications of Switching from Coal to Natural Gas at the Capitol Power Plant and at Electricity-Generating Units Nationwide”. United States Government Accountability Office. Washington, DC

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Butti, K., and J. Perlin. 1981. A Golden Thread: 2500 Years of Solar Architecture and Technology. Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 0442240058.


  • United States Department of Energy (USDOE). n.d. The history of solar. Dept. of Energy. Retrieved January 15, 2014. .[1]


  • United States Energy Information Administration (EIA). 2014. Solar energy explained. EIA. Retrieved January 15, 2014.

[2]

  • Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). 2014. Solar fuels. Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved January 15, 2014.



Smil, Vaclav (1991). General Energetics: Energy in the Biosphere and Civilization. Wiley. p. 369. ISBN 0-471-62905-7.

Smil, Vaclav (2006-05-17). Energy at the Crossroads (PDF). Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. ISBN 0-262-19492-9. Retrieved 2007-09-29.

Scheer, Hermann (2002). The Solar Economy (Renewable Energy for a Sustainable Global Future). Earthscan Publications Ltd. ISBN 1-84407-075-1.


  • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). 2001. Appendix II Glossary. IPCC Third Assessment Report Working Group III: Mitigation. Retrieved January 14, 2014.


  • Smith, Z. A., and K. D. Taylor. 2008. Renewable and Alternative Energy Resources. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781598840896.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.

  1. {{cite web
    • Butti and Perlin (1981), p.2-13
  2. L. Ryback (2007). Geothermal Sustainability. GHC Bulletin: 2–6.