Natural resources that are renewable include solar, wind, geothermal, water, and biomass. These resources can last indefinitely because of the properties of that resource. For example, solar energy from sunlight won't really run out since the sun is always shining. Wood, garbage, leaves, and many burnable things exist in large quantities already, and trees can always be planted.
Nonrenewable Resources
Natural resource, such as coal, oil, or natural gas, that takes millions of years to form naturally and therefore cannot be replaced once it is consumed; it will eventually be used up. The main energy sources used by humans are non-renewable; renewable resources, such as solar, tidal, wind, and geothermal power, have so far been less exploited.
Example of Renewable Resources

Renewable energy

Five Types and Uses Of Renewable and Non Renewable Resources:
1.) Hydropower
Hydropower is the capture of the energy of moving water (falling of water from one level to another) for some useful purpose. This falling of water can be natural falling source or from a dam. The falling water is used to turn waterwheels or modern turbine blades which is used to powering a generator to produce electricity. Hydropower system is a clean source of energy systems that can neither be polluted or consumed during its operation. It eliminates the cost of fuel, making it immune to price increases for fossil fuels. As long there is a water source (lake, river etc.) it is renewable.
![[hydroplant+animation.gif]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjXQ8a9dMzuDhE3Y62J3yNPyTvSsy4CmkTuS-ZFHiyKcRena52UQsvNgfChdNBnCL9TKtVkAbhN25bwkTwqeRbNI_fezLBisAbq6ZFMZWKzC_P6JmgQ_g55r7-NnAaCFs7XjoAAuDx5mrQ/s1600/hydroplant+animation.gif)
2.) Solar Energy
Solar energy is the energy from the sun ( in the form of heat and light) that is directly capture and converted into thermal or electrical energy and harnessed as solar power. Solar power is the technology of obtaining (harnessing) usable energy from the light of the sun. Some applications of solar energy are hot water heating and space heating in the home. It is also used in the application of solar panels where individual homes (in region where it is warm and sunny) convert solar energy into thermal energy to generate electricity.The use of solar energy displaces conventional energy where it results in a proportional decrease in green house gas emissions. The energy from the sun is free with just the initial cost to set up the technology. The sun provides unlimited (renewable) supply of solar energy. The only draw back is that its requires a large area to collect the sun’s radiation and requires some means of storage.
![[solar+power+-+solar+energy.gif]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhP5VdfgAs6Poj9dgGZfOCYgiOyM3mNjRFdYlmxz0iAxxSa9hr2NjjjLQxPDEzH8N2qzjm6mMdY0XxOGJyDiKyOSlZEHoPUyfY0K9_Ts0xvFbIN6DPPvrZnNDM1JyHPRMGQSsbssP7MuRs/s1600/solar+power+-+solar+energy.gif)
- Wind power is the conversion of wind energy into electricity using wind turbines (usually mounted on a tower). Wind power is used in large scale wind farms for national electrical grids. On a small scale it is also used to provide electricity to rural residences. Wind energy is ample, free, widely available, clean, renewable, produces no waste or greenhouse gases, need no fuel, good method of supplying energy to remote areas and can be a site for tourist attraction.
![[wind+power+-+wind+turbines.jpg]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjH6Pfe8AuIRMTFE9CADVOOvoyWJzdk1tE1YxOziiyP_cfUcRAaeGmKHHWyoawSESdFuzKWcn5CAXVU3kuGiZYuH-1rzHcJK86a0-ZeKK77kMiVkCkL3fkdknkZMz21g-EWON_Tuue6LCk/s1600/wind+power+-+wind+turbines.jpg)
4.) Biomass Fuel
Biomass Fuel (Biofuels) is any organic material produced by living organisms (plants, animals, or microorganisms) that can be burned directly as a heat source or converted into a liquid or gas. Some examples of biomass fuels are wood, crop residues, peat, manure, leaves, animal materials and other plant material.
There are two major sources of biomass;
i. trees, gains, sugar crops and oil-bearing plants.
ii. waste organic materials from industrial, commercial, domestic, or agricultural wastes. Examples, crop residues, animal wastes, garbage, and human sewage.
There are two major sources of biomass;
i. trees, gains, sugar crops and oil-bearing plants.
ii. waste organic materials from industrial, commercial, domestic, or agricultural wastes. Examples, crop residues, animal wastes, garbage, and human sewage.
![[Biomass+Fuel.gif]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUAT-thIUuHtf9CgZlSU0qDwtNtS8Hkk78hnw37IX00BKdC65WS6p3DL7i8SD4CDU88slCji3lDVA9mYOWvJJn1P3ZFM1qgs5vm2O3GNhlkbZr0g7B1JEEM4VssNPpo_vwDkVPlqtSIMk/s1600/Biomass+Fuel.gif)
5.) Geothermal Energy
Geothermal Energy is power generated by the harnessing of heat from the interior of the earth when it comes to (or close to) the earth’s surface. The regions with highest underground temperatures are in areas with active or geologically young volcanoes. Chief energy resources are hot dry rock, magma (molten rock), hydrothermal (water/steam from geysers and fissures) and geo-pressure (methane-saturated water under tremendous pressure at great depths).
There are several methods of deriving energy from the earth’s heat where the heat energy that is generated by converting hot water or steam from deep beneath the Earth’s surface is converted into electricity. This hot water or steam come from a mile or more beneath the earth surface. geothermal applications includes:
i. Geothermal Electricity Production - generating electricity from the earth's heat. The steam rotates a turbine that activates a generator, which produces electricity.
ii. Geothermal Direct Use - Producing heat directly from hot water within the earth.
iii. Geothermal Heat Pumps - Using the shallow ground to heat and cool buildings.
There are several methods of deriving energy from the earth’s heat where the heat energy that is generated by converting hot water or steam from deep beneath the Earth’s surface is converted into electricity. This hot water or steam come from a mile or more beneath the earth surface. geothermal applications includes:
i. Geothermal Electricity Production - generating electricity from the earth's heat. The steam rotates a turbine that activates a generator, which produces electricity.
ii. Geothermal Direct Use - Producing heat directly from hot water within the earth.
iii. Geothermal Heat Pumps - Using the shallow ground to heat and cool buildings.
Nice Post, The current waste management system needs to be evolved according to the new emerging challenges. With more and more electronic waste now in the households we definitely need a new strategy to handle such challenges.
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