Sunday, May 20, 2012

Solar Power And The Energy Crunch

By Kori Zullo


It's shocking how much money it costs to fill a automobile's tank nowadays. Inflated fuel pricing is having an effect on just about every facet of life. Food costs as well as other physical product prices are inflated because of increases in transportation and shipping. For people who drive, most Americans, disposable earnings are reduced. It is tough to discover a silver lining in all that.

However, there's definitely one positive side-effect. Quite similar to the oil crunch in the 1980s, the high expense of fuel has turned the Public's eyes back toward renewable energy and sustainable energy. In short, the discomfort of fuel pricing has exceeded the complacency. There is now an increased interest in fossil fuel alternatives.

Alternative energy is most often described as being able to generate energy in the present without compromising that ability of our children and grandchildren to generate power. It generally denotes using natural energy sources which replenish themselves. Unlike oil, that will finally be consumed entirely, other sources, like sunlight, wind, rain, and tides will last so long as our world will.

Solar panel technology involves harnessing sunlight either to produce electrical energy or heat water. The effectiveness of solar panel technology can vary according to weather conditions and landscape. Nevertheless, that issue can be overcome by feeding the national electric utility grid from regions with suited features. When it comes to individual property owners, the main issue with solar is the start up, installation costs which may be quite high, however the long term savings and tax breaks can totally offset the upfront expenses throughout the life of the solar cell system.

Because of the recent launch of electrical automobiles and vehicles with gas support generators, solar power now carries the opportunity to replace the majority of petrol use in non-commercial motor vehicles. The current iteration of such motor vehicles will run eighty to 100 miles per charge. The typical American drives under 40 miles daily with work commuting.

Utilizing wind mills in order to create electrical power is a progression of a thousand year old technology that makes use of windmills to pump water. It has different but similar topographical limitations to solar power. All the same, windmill farms in mountain passes can produce power for the nation's power grid just like desert solar farms.

In so far as water goes, technologies have made great strides since the hydro-electric dam. It is still an exceptionally legitimate technology that has been around for quite some time. These days, research is under way to utilize the tidal action of the ocean to produce power with a buoy system.

The clear theme here is that renewable energy technology has been in use for countless years. All the same, only the current pain of high gas costs have inspired consumers to move away from the much more convenient fossil fuels. Practically all progress comes with some distress.




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