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Hydroelectric
Hydroelectric
energy is water energy. Moving water contains an enormous store of natural
energy, whether the water is part of a running river or waves in the ocean.
Think of the destructive force of a river breaking its banks and causing floods
or of tall waves breaking on a shallow coastlines, and you can visualize the
amount of power involved.
This
energy can be harnessed and converted to electricity, and the generation of
hydroelectric power does not produce greenhouse gas emissions. It is also a
renewable energy resource because water is constantly replenished through the
Earth's hydrological cycle. All a hydroelectric system needs is a permanent
source of running water, like a creek or river. Unlike solar or wind energy, it
can produce power continuously, 24 hours a day.
Wave power
The World Energy Council estimates that wave power could produce two terawatts
of energy each year. This is twice the world's current electricity production,
and is equivalent to the energy produced by 2,000 large oil, gas, coal and
nuclear power stations. The total renewable energy within the world's oceans, if
it could all be harnessed, would satisfy the present world demand for energy
more than 5,000 times over. But until now, harnessing wave power was only
a theoretical possibility. In fact, the technology is still under development,
and it's too early to estimate how soon it will significantly contribute to the
global energy picture.
River power
In 2003, 16 percent of the world's electricity was produced by hydropower
plants. Hydropower harnesses the energy of water going from a higher to a lower
level (i.e. water running downstream). The greater the drop in elevation, the
faster the water flows, and the more electricity that can be produced.
Unfortunately, the dams that go with large scale hydropower can drown
ecosystems. Water needs of downstream communities, farmers and ecosystems should
also be taken into account. Plus, hydro projects can be unreliable during
prolonged droughts and dry seasons when rivers dry up or reduce in volume.
However, small-scale hydro systems can produce plenty of electricity without
needing the large dams. Classified as "small", "mini" or
"micro" depending on how much electricity they produce, small hydro
systems capture the river's energy without diverting too much water away from
its natural flow.
Small-scale hydropower is an environmentally benign energy source with large
growth potential, but it won't reach this potential unless we give it a chance.
See the Take
Action page for how you can be part of the solution to climate change.
Published
by: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/climate-change/solutions/hydroelectric
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