Importance Of Energy Resources

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What is energy resources
Natural resources are useful raw materials that we get from the Earth. They appear without any intervention from human, Instead, human can use and modify natural resources in ways that we can get benefit from it.in another word they are opportunities of an area offers to generate electricity depending on its natural circumstances. Natural energy resources can be divided in two essential types.
• Renewable
• Nonrenewable
Let’s see why there is a noticeable increase in resources use
Population Increase: as increasing in population there is an extra demand on energy that could not be covered by currently nonrenewable sources and that lead to massive pressures on our planet’s biodiversity and future life
Increase in purchasing …show more content…

Global warming due to carbon dioxide emission
B. Acidic rain due to burning of fossil fuel producing pollutions like sulfur dioxide (So2) and oxide of nitrogen (NOx)
To reduce these impacts on habitants and individuals many countries turn to use alternative ways of renewable energy resources one of the promising future sustainable energy recourses was [Soler cells]
Soler cells renewable energy source
For many reasons, scientists around the world are beginning to focus more on renewable energy; principal among these is the impact of CO2 emissions on climate change, the limited supply of fossil fuels and the huge and exponentially increasing global population, all motivating research into renewable energy sources [1].
Possible sources of renewable energy are solar power, wind power, rain, tide and geothermal heat. However, solar energy is the most significant of these resources, as the earth benefits from a huge amount of sunlight. In one minute, the sun provides enough power to meet global energy needs for one whole year. In one day, it can provide more energy than the present global population would consume in 27 years. By way of comparison, the total amount of solar radiation reaching the earth over a three-day period is equal to that contained in all fossil fuel

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