energy yesterday, today, and tomorrow epit c. ned rogers

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Energy Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

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Energy Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers. Yesterday – Burning Wood. Heat Light Cooking. Yesterday – Fossil Fuels. Coal, oil, and natural gas formed from plants and animals that lived up to 300 million years ago. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

EPITC. Ned Rogers

Page 2: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Yesterday – Burning Wood

• Heat• Light• Cooking

Page 3: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Yesterday – Fossil Fuels• Coal, oil, and natural gas formed from plants and

animals that lived up to 300 million years ago.• Fossil fuels are found in deposits beneath the Earth’s

surface.• Fossil fuels are an exhaustible energy source because

it takes millions of years for them to form.• In the 19th century we

started to extract and use fossil fuels for energy.

Page 4: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Renewables7%Nuclear

8%

Natural Gas22%

Petroleum40%

Coal23% Coal

Petroleum

Natural Gas

Uranium

Renewables

Energy Today

• 85% of U.S. energy consumption is still fossil fuels.• 34% of U.S. energy needs are imported.• 64% of the petroleum used in the U.S. is imported.

Page 5: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Hydropower, 3%

Biomass, 3.3%

Solar, 0.1%Geothermal, 0.35%

Wind, 0.25%

Biomass

Hydropower

Geothermal

Wind

Solar

Energy Today

• The 7% of renewable energy used in the U.S. is divided into 5 sources as shown below.

Page 6: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy Usage

Transportation28%

Residential21%

Commercial18%Industrial

33%

What is Energy Used for Today?

Page 7: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy in the Future – Petroleum

• At current levels of consumption, the world’s oil reserves are expected to last about 40 years.

• There may be some oil that is currently undetected, but it cannot be economically extracted with current technology.

Page 8: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy in the Future – Natural Gas

Known gas reserves are expected to last about 60 years at current consumption levels with current technology.

Page 9: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy in the Future – Coal

If we continue to use coal at the current consumption rate, we expect to run out in about 200 years.

Page 10: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Energy in the Future

• We are using fossil fuels that were made more than 300 million years ago.

• They are not renewable; they can’t really be made again.

• We can save fossil fuels by– Conserving energy– Using alternative energy sources

Page 11: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Alternative Energy – Future

More money and research will go into developing alternative energy sources.

HydropowerRenewablegravitational energy of moving water

WindRenewablekinetic energy from moving air

NuclearNon-renewablepotential energy stored in the nucleus of an atom

BiomassRenewablestored chemical energy from wood, garbage, and agricultural wastes

Page 12: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Alternative Energy – Future

SolarRenewableradiant energy from the sun

GeothermalRenewableheat energy from beneath the Earth’s surface

Many career opportunities will be involved with the research and development of alternative energy sources.

Page 13: Energy  Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow EPIT C. Ned Rogers

Smart Grid - Future

• Smart Grid technology changes the way we manage and distribute energy by making our current power grid more intelligent.

• A Smart grid delivers electricity from suppliers to consumers using digital technology to save energy, reduce cost and increase reliability.

• Smart Grid• Smart Grid for Intelligent Energy Use