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Renewable: Energy Resources

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Renewable: Energy Resources

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hfitzwater29
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Name: _____________________________________ Date: _____________________ Period: ______

Energy Resources
Humans have been harvesting electricity and energy from natural
resources for over a hundred years. This electricity is, or can be, used for
almost everything we know today: from communication and lighting to cooking
and transportation. However, not all electricity is produced in the same.
Energy resources are typically separated by how it is generated:
renewable and non-renewable. Renewable energy resources generate
electricity from sources that do not run out, or that can be renewed quickly.
Hydropower generates electricity from moving water, which is very reliable –
rivers rarely dry up, and tides and waves keep moving. Non-Renewable energy
resources generate electricity from sources that cannot be quickly or easily
renewed. Coal and petroleum take millions of years to form from dead life, and
have limited amounts on Earth. Eventually these “fossil fuels” (energy sources
formed from long-dead life) will run out with no way to renew them.
Another factor to think about with how electricity is produced is how each
source affects the environment around us. Most renewable sources of energy do
not emit greenhouse gases: chemicals in the air that capture sunlight and warm
atmosphere. These are important because, with enough greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere, it can become warm unnaturally, a process called global warming. All
fossil fuels release these chemicals when they are burnt: coal, oil, petroleum,
gasoline, and natural gas. Common greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide, methane,
and water vapor. Furthermore, mining for certain resources, such as coal, can
damage the environment.

Open-pit coal mine. Notice how there is no life


in or near this mine.
© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials
Renewable Resources are resources that are
renewed naturally within a human lifespan. The sun,
wind, hydropower, bioenergy, and geothermal are all
renewed so that people can use them again and again
without them running out. However, some of these
sources can be considered to be limited because of
how they generate electricity: the wind isn’t always
blowing, the sun isn’t always shining, and rivers can dry up. There are areas, though, that are known for their wind, sun, and water: Nevada
and Texas are known for being sunny, and decrease the limits of solar power because clouds rarely block the sun in these areas. These
resources can be expensive to invest in.
Wind energy produces electricity Hydroelectric energy, or hydro
through the wind turning the blades power, is generated by water
on these towers. The blades spin moving through the power plant.
turbines, producing electricity. This Gravity always pulls water down,
method works best in windy areas, and from the mountains to the sea,
produces absolutely no carbon dioxide causing water to move. In the
or methane. plant, moving water spins
generators, which produce
electricity.
Solar power produces Geothermal energy can produce
electricity through solar panels electricity by pumping water to
converting sunlight directly to hot areas in the Earth’s crust.
electricity. It is considered There, the water is heated to
“clean” because solar panels steam, runs up pipes to the
passively produce electricity surface, where it turns turbines
without releasing carbon and produces electricity.
dioxide or methane.
Biomass energy generates electricity through life: wood, corn, etc. This material can be
burnt directly or rotted for methane, a fuel source. Cooking oils, such as vegetable oil, are
normally generated from plants, and can be used as fuels in adapted engines: this means
that some cars can run on the deep-frying oils used for french fries!

© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials


Non-Renewable Resources are energy resources are not renewed as quickly as we use
them, if they renew at all. Except for nuclear, these resources are produced quickly,
easily, and cheaply, are relatively cost-effective, and pollute the environment: releasing
greenhouse gases, causing global warming, and some release chemicals that cause acid rain.
The production of these energy sources involves mining (coal and nuclear) or drilling (oil
and natural gas), which can be harm the areas around the production sites. “Fossil fuels”
(oil, natural gas, and coal), formed from long-dead life, are limited in volume on Earth,
meaning that one day these fuels will be used up. Nuclear is considered non-renewable
because the radioactive materials used do not renew at all, but genetates electricity in a
unique way: unstable elements are mined and used to heat water, turning turbines to produce electricity. Nuclear facilities are large,
expensive investments that pay out with electricity over time, so they are not as cheap, but have more fuel and potential than fossil fuels.
Coal is found underground,
formed from the pressurized and
heated remains of dead plants. It
burns at high temperatures,
which has been useful in
transportation, transportation,
and production of electricity. Oil, or petroleum, is produced by drilling a pipe into an oil-rich rock
However, burning coal produces layer. Using various techniques, we can draw this oil up the pipe, and
significant amounts of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, along with to the surface. Oil, like coal, produces plenty of carbon dioxide and
other pollutants, causing global warming and acid rain. Mining, as the pollutants when burnt, causing global warming and acid rain. Oil can
picture shows, can remove any vegetation in the area. This means that leak from pipes and drill sites, which can cause more environmental
coal is a very environmentally damaging energy source. damage and problems for life. Oil is what gasoline is made from:
gasoline, when burned in cars, produces carbon dioxide.
Natural gas is a fossil Nuclear power uses
fuel and a flammable radioactive materials
gas, frequently used to heat up water.
for lighting, cooking, These materials are
and, more recently, mined, but contain
vehicles. It is great amounts of
produced in a similar radioactive energy,
manner to oil: we drill a pipe to rock that contains the natural gas, and which is released
we pipe it up. Natural gas is primarily composed of methane, and through fission: larger elements are split into smaller ones,
produces carbon dioxide when burnt. Natural gas is considered “clean” converting mass into energy. While these carry some risk of the
because, while it still causes global warming if it leaks or is burnt, it is release of dangerous radioactivity, they are generally considered to
not as polluting as other fossil fuels. be safe, and have potential for generating large amounts of energy.
© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials
Name: _____________________________________ Date: _____________________ Period: ______
Energy Questions
1. What is the difference between “renewable” and “non-renewable” energy resources?
Renewable resources do not deplete when used, and never run out; non-renewable resources are
depleted when used, and do run out.
2. Name the advantages of renewable energy resources.
Renewable energy resources do not run out; they are considered “clean”: they don’t emit much, if
any, pollution
3. Name the advantages of non-renewable energy resources.
They tend to be cheap, easy, quick to produce, and cost-effective.
4. Name the disadvantages of renewable energy resources.
They may be limited by environmental factors: solar, by clouds and nighttime; wind, by calm days;
etc. They can also be expensive to invest in.
5. Name the disadvantages of non-renewable energy resources.
The resources used to generate non-renewable electricity will run out; they can be very polluting
to the environment, and cause global warming; nuclear fusion requires a large investment.
6. Why are non-renewable energy resources considered finite?
Because the resources used to generate this electricity do not renew quickly.
7. What are some of the environmental concerns that can occur with non-renewable energy resources?
Pollution from non-renewable energy resources can cause acid rain and climate change/global
warming.
8. How does nuclear power generate electricity?
Nuclear fission: larger atoms are broken apart into smaller ones, converting mass into energy, and
heating water to turn turbines.
9. What causes global warming?
Carbon dioxide and methane, released by the burning of fossil fuels, trap heat in the atmosphere.
10. Name several ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Reduce oil/petroleum/gasoline/coal usage: use the car less, bike more, use more renewable energy
sources

Energy Sort: Place each type of energy source into the appropriate type!
Renewable Non-Renewable
Solar Oil
Hydroelectric Natural gas
Geothermal Nuclear
Wind Petroleum
Biomass Coal

Energy Sort Word Bank


Solar Hydroelectric Geothermal Coal Wind Oil
Biomass Natural Gas Nuclear Petroleum
Biomass

© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials


Name: _____________________________________ Date: _____________________ Period: ______
Energy Resources Crossword

R e
P o l l u t i o n

N a
N u

e
n e

t r

D r
w a
t u
G e

o
l

G l o b a l w a r m i n g
r
o t

e a

l
l

e
e

l
a

r e e
H y d r o e l e c t r i c

l
u m
e

t
g a

r W i n d
r m

F o s s i l f u e l
s

h
S o l a r
c
a l

B i o m a s s

u
t

s
N o n r e n e w a b l e
y

g
Word Bank
Electricity

a
Greenhouse Gases

s e s
Renewable
Non-Renewable
Solar
Across Wind
2. Contamination that is the environmentally damaging result of burning all fossil fuels Biomass
9. Rising atmospheric temperatures caused by the release of greenhouse gases Hydroelectric
11. Energy source that produces from the electricity from moving water Geothermal
12. Energy source that produces from the electricity from moving air Global Warming
13. Liquid and solid energy sources formed from warmed long-dead life Fossil Fuel
14. Energy source that produces from the electricity from the sun Coal
15. Energy source that produces from the electricity from life, such as corn and wood Natural Gas
16. Energy resources that are not readily replaced, and depleted when used Nuclear
Down Petroleum
1. Energy resources that are not depleted when used Drill
2. Liquid fossil fuel energy source that produces pollution when burnt Pollution
3. Energy formed from radioactive elements
4. Liquid fossil fuel energy source that produces electricity and heat as methane
5. Energy source that produces from the electricity from water heated underground
6. Solid fossil fuel energy source that produces electricity and heat from warmed and compressed long-dead life
7. Method for obtaining liquid fossil fuels
8. Why we build power stations, and the power for phones and TVs
10. Chemicals released into the environment when fossil fuels are burnt

© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials


Energy Resources Word Search

RENEWABLE
C V N A T U R A L G A S G Z
NONRENEWABLE
S U P P N Z V C S J H N N J
SOLAR
E L E H N L Y B O S Y U I P
WIND
S L T S O L T D L K D C M J
BIOMASS
A E R N I I I S A N R L R W
HYDROELECTRIC
G U O E T R C B R O O E A A
GEOTHERMAL
E F L R U D I G D N E A W T
COAL
S L E B L R R E O R L R L T
NATURALGAS
U I U S L E T O I E E G A W
NUCLEAR
O S M S O N C T L N C B B I
OIL
H S N S P E E H H E T H O N
PETROLEUM
N O A A X W L E C W R U L D
DRILL
E F H M Z A E R F A I H G C
POLLUTION
E L S O T B H M T B C L O X
ELECTRICITY
R Y L I S L K A N L T A E X
GREENHOUSEGASES
G P S B A E T L A E L B H O
GLOBALWARMING
FOSSILFUEL

© Evan Becker https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Beckers-Teaching-Materials

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