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Fossil Fuels - Coal, Oil and Gas

Introduction  How it works  More details  Advantages  Disadvantages  Is it renewable?

Introduction

This one looks fossilisedCoal, Oil and Gas are called "fossil fuels" because they have been formed from the fossilised remains of prehistoric plants and animals. They provide around 66% of the world's electrical power, and 95% of the world's total energy demands (including heating, transport, electricity generation and other uses).

How it works:

Coal is crushed to a fine dust and burnt. Oil and gas can be burnt directly.

More Details:drilling for oil

Coal provides around 28% of our energy, and oil provides 40%.
Burning coal produces sulphur dioxide, an acidic gas that contributes to the formation of acid rain. This can be largely avoided using "flue gas desulphurisation" to clean up the gases before they are released into the atmosphere. This method uses limestone, and produces gypsum for the building industry as a by-product. However, it uses a lot of limestone.

Crude oil (called "petroleum") is easier to get out of the ground than coal, as it can flow along pipes. This also makes it cheaper to transport.

Natural gas provides around 20% of the world's consumption of energy, and as well as being burnt in power stations, is used by many people to heat their homes.
It is easy to transport along pipes, and gas power stations produce comparatively little pollution.

Other fossil fuels are being investigated, such as bituminous sands and oil shale.
The difficulty is that they need expensive processing before we can use them.

cooling towersThe steam that has passed through the power station's turbines has to be cooled, to condense it back into water before it can be pumped round again. This is what happens in the huge "cooling towers" seen at power stations.

Some power stations are built on the coast, so they can use sea water to cool the steam instead. However, this warms the sea and can affect the environment, although the fish seem to like it.

Advantages

Disadvantagescoal

Is it renwewable?

Fossil fuels are not a renewable energy source. Once we've burned them all, there isn't any more, and our consumption of fossil fuels has nearly doubled every 20 years since 1900. This is a particular problem for Oil, because we also use it to make plastics and many other products.


Contents page
You`re already on this pageNuclear Power
Energy from the SunGeothermal Power - energy from underground
Wind PowerHydro-electric Power - energy from water
Tidal PowerPumped Storage Reservoirs - storing energy ready for high demands
getting energy from waves on the seaBiomass - burning wood and waste
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