Science, asked by smartyaryan143, 1 year ago

☺ write a short note on energy needs of the future ☺

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
16
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⚡️⚡️ HERE I AM FOR ALL WELL-THOUGHT AND QUALITY ANSWERS ⚡️⚡️

➡️ Energy is very precious. We should not waste that. In future, energy will be needed simultaneously in almost every works. Let us have a detailed study on this topic.

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■ Future Electricity Needs ⏩ In future, coal and natural gas will still be used for producing electricity as the way they have been used now.

■ Social Consumption ⏩ In or around some cities present big industries which have a very high demand of power. Maximum electrical energy will be used in such places more specially for providing civic facilities such as street lighting, water supply, establishments of cinema halls, etc.


■ Global Consumption In Future ⏩ The transport and modernisation of agriculture are putting and will put a heavy demand on energy consumption in future. But Globally, the indiscriminate use of energy is leading to energy crisis which can result in war between the countries which have large resources of energy with the ones which have small resources of energy.







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Answered by Anonymous
7
yoo

Energy Sources Of The Future

First the bad news: With oil prices rising and energy demand from emerging economies ballooning, no single energy source will emerge to replace fossil fuels.

The good news is that that’s OK. Even if nothing ever rules the world like oil did last century, different regions will adapt by tapping the technologies and energy sources that suit them best.

“We’ll really be looking at a tapestry…as opposed to the silver bullet notion that one source will break through and dominate,” says Barry Rabe, a professor of environmental policy at the University of Michigan – Ann Arbor.

So just how will our grandchildren meet their energy needs? We’ll continue to use oil and natural gas for decades, if not centuries, but as a shrinking portion of our energy pie. We’ll also use commonly proposed alternatives like corn-based ethanol and nuclear generators.

But there are also big changes ahead, both in terms of what we use and how much we use technologies that already exist. Take wind generation. The industry is growing at about 30% a year, says Edward Guinness, co-manager of the Guinness Atkinson Alternative Energy Fund. That’s faster than other renewable energy sources like solar and hydro-power. The price of wind-generated energy is currently competitive with fossil fuels, Guinness says.

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