Renewable and non-renewable resources

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Physics

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20 Terms

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Energy resource
A useful supply or store of energy
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Non-renewable
Energy sources that they are being used at a higher rate than they can be replaced so will eventually run out (finite)
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Examples of non-renewable resources
Fossil fuels (coal, crude oil, natural gas), nuclear fuels (uranium, plutonium)
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Finite
Something that has a limited number of uses before it runs out
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Renewable
Energy sources that are (or can be) replenished as they are being used so will not run out
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Examples of renewable resources
Bio-fuels, solar, wind, geothermal, wave, tidal, hydroelectric
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Replenishing renewable resources
Human action, natural processes
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Fossil fuels
Fuels formed from the remains of living organisms (coal, crude oil, natural gas)
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Nuclear fuels
Radioactive materials used in nuclear reactors (uranium, plutonium)
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Bio-fuels
Fuels made from plant and animal waste (wood; bio-diesel)
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Resources used for transport
Fossil fuels, bio-fuels
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Resources used for heating
Fossil fuels, bio-fuels, geothermal, solar
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Resources used to generate electricity
Fossil fuels, nuclear fuels, bio-fuels, solar, wind, geothermal, wave, tidal, hydroelectric
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Reliable (energy resource)
an energy resource that can supply enough energy to meet demand at predictable times
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Examples of reliable resources
Fossil fuels, nuclear fuels, bio-fuels, tidal, hydroelectric and geothermal
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Environmental impact
the damage to the environment caused by using an energy resource to produce electricity
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Examples of environmental impact
Pollution, harmful waste products and loss of habitats
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Pollution
Damage to the land, air or water caused by a toxic chemical or an object
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Atmospheric pollution
Carbon dioxide released from burning fossil fuels and bio-fuels, sulphur dioxide released from burning coal
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Carbon neutral
Burning bio-fuels can be considered a carbon neutral process because it releases the same amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as the crops absorbed for photosynthesis when they were growing