Text 1. What is energy?

      Energy lights our cities, powers our vehicles, and runs machinery in facto­ries. It warms and cools our homes, cooks our food, plays our music, and gives us pictures on television.

      Energy is defined as the ability or the capacity to do work. We use energy to do work and make all movements. When we eat, our bod­ies transform the food into energy to do work. When we run or walk or do some work, we 'burn' energy in our bodies. Cars, planes, trolleys, boats, and machinery also transform energy into work. Work means mov­ing or lifting something, warming or lighting something. There are many sources of energy that help to run the various machines in­vented by man.

The discovery of fire by man led to the possibility of burning wood for cooking and heating thereby using energy. Fоr several thousand years human energy demands were met only by renew­able energy sources - sun, biomass (wood, leaves, twigs), hydel (water) and wind power.

As early as 4000-3500 ВС, the first sailing ships and windmills were developed harnessing wind energy. With the use of hydropow­er through water mills or irrigation systems, things began to move faster. Fuel wood and dung cakes are even today a major source of energy in rural India. Solar energy is used for drying and heating.

With the advent of the Industrial Revolution, the use of energy in the form of fossil fuels began growing as more and more industries were set up. This occurred in stages, from the exploitation of coal deposits to the exploitation of oil and natural gas fields. It has been only half a century since nuclear power began being used as an energy source.

In the past century, it became evident that the consumption of non-renewable sources of energy had caused more environmental damage than any other human activity. Electricity generated from fossil fuels such as coal and crude oil has led to high concentrations of harmful gases in the atmosphere. This has in turn led to problems such as ozone depletion and global warming. Vehicular pollution is also a grave problem.

There has been an enormous increase in the demand for energy since the middle of the last century as a result of industrial devel­opment and population growth. World population grew 3,2 times between 1850 and 1970, per capita use of industrial energy in­creased about twenty fold, and total world use of industrial and traditional energy forms combined increased more than twelvefold.

       Due to the problems associated with the use of fossil fuels, alternative sources of energy have become important and relevant in today's world. These sources, such as the sun and wind, can never he exhausted and are therefore called renewable. Also known as the non-conventional sources of energy, they cause less emission and are available locally. Their use can significantly reduce chemical, radioactive, and thermal pollution. They are viable sources of clean and limitless energy. Most of the renewable sources of energy are fairly non-polluting and considered clean. However, biomass is a major polluter indoors.

 Renewable energy sources include the sun, wind, water, agri­cultural residue, fuelwood, and animal dung. Fossil fuels are non-renewable sources. Energy generated from the sun is known as so­lar energy. Hydel is the energy derived from water. Biomass – fire­wood, animal dung, and biodegradable waste from cities and crop residues is a source of energy when it is burnt. Geothermal ener­gy is derived from hot dry rocks, magma, hot water springs, natural geysers, etc. Ocean thermal is energy derived from waves and also from tidal waves.

Through the method of co-generation a cleaner and less pollut­ing form of energy is being generated. Fuel cells are also being used as cleaner energy source.

Total commercial energy consumption has been growing tre­mendously since the last decade. Per capita commercial energy consumption in low-income countries have more than doubled. About 15 % of the world's population living in the wealthy indus­trialized nations consume over half the energy used in the world. The number of motor vehicles in use worldwide has more than doubled since 1970.

In some respects, the global energy system has evolved in a cleaner direction in the last 25 years. The share of world primary energy derived from natural gas the cleanest fossil fuel - has in­creased by more than 25 %. So has the use and generation of re­newable energy sources.

Still, the overall efficiency of energy production remains ex­tremely low: on average, more than 90 % of energy consumed is lost or wasted in the process of conversion from raw materials such as coal to the final energy service such as the light to read a book. The main problem isn't that we use energy, but how we produce and consume energy resources. What we really need are energy sources that will last forever and can be used without polluting the environment. Conserving energy has become the need of the day be it in the transport, household, or industrial sectors (source: www.howstuffworks.com)

 


Last modified: Monday, 30 April 2018, 9:53 PM