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INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING

(Autonomous)
Dundigal, Hyderabad -500 043

UNIT-V
Natural Resources and Environmental Pollution

I.Classification of Resources

Resources can be classified in the following ways:

(A) Living and non living resources

Living resources : These are biological resources that are used by human beings Examples:
forests, croplands, animal resources.

Non-living resources: These are not derived from biological materials


Examples: soil, land, water

(B) Renewable and non renewable resources

Renewable resources: These are in exhaustive and can be regenerated within a given span of
time
Examples: forests, wildlife, wind energy, biomass energy, tidal energy,hydro power etc
Solar energy is also a renewable form of energy as it is an inexhaustible source of energy.

Non-renewable resources : The resource which cannot be regenerated in a time span


Examples: Fossil fuels like coal, petroleum, minerals etc.
Once we exhaust these reserves, the same cannot be replenished.
Even our renewable resources can become non-renewable if we exploit them to such extent
that their rate of consumption exceed their rate of consumption exceeds their rate of
regeneration.
Example: if species is exploited so much that its population size declines below the threshold
level then it is not able to sustain itself and gradually the species becomes endangered or
extinct.

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It is very important to protect and conserve our natural resources and use them in judicious
manner so that we do not exhaust them.It does not mean that we should stop using most of the
natural resources.

II.Water Resources:
Water is an indispensable natural resource on this earth on which all life depends. About 97%
of the earth s surface is covered by water and most of the animals and plants have 60-65%
water in their body.

Water : A Precious Natural Resource:


 Although water is very abundant on this earth , yet it is very precious.
 Out of the total water reserves of the world, about 97% is salty water and only 3% is
readily available to us in the form of ground water and surface water.
 Even this small fraction of fresh water is not available to us as most of it is locked up in
polar ice caps and just 0.003% is readily available to us in the form of groundwater and
surface water.
 Overuse of groundwater for drinking, irrigation and domestic purposes has resulted in
rapid depletion of groundwater in various regions leading to lowering of water table and
drying of wells.
 Pollution of many of the groundwater aquifers has made many of these wells unfit for
consumption.
 Rivers and streams have long been used for discharging the wastes.
 Most of the civilizations have grown and flourished on the banks of rivers, but
unfortunately, growth in turn, has been responsible for pollution of the rivers
 As per the United Nations estimates (2002), at least 101 billion people do not even have
access to safe drinking water and 2.4 billion do not have adequate sanitation facilities.
 Increasing population and expanding development would further increase3 the demands
for water
 It is estimated that by 2024, two-thirds of the world population would be suffering from
acute water shortage.

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Water _A Unique Resource

1. Water is characterized by certain unique features which make it marvelous


resource

2. It exists as a liquid over a wide range of temperature i.e. from 00 c to 1000c

3. It has the highest specific heat , due to which it warms up and cools down very
slowly without causing shocks of temperature jerks to aquatic life.

4. It has a high latent heat of vaporization .Hence; it takes a huge amount of energy
for getting vaporized. That’s why it produces a cooling effect as it evaporates.

5. It is an excellent solvent for several nutrients. Thus, it can serve as very good
carrier of nutrients, including oxygen, which are essential for life. But , it can also
dissolve various pollutants and become a carrier of pathogenic microorganisms.

6. Due to high surface tension and cohesion it can easily rise through great heights
through the trunk even in the tallest of the trees like sequoia.

7. It has anomalous expansion behavior i.e as it freezes; it expands instead of


contracting and thus becomes lighter. It is because of this property that even in
extreme cold, the lakes freeze only on the surface. Being lighter the ice keeps
floating, where as the bottom waters remain at a higher temperature and where as
the bottom waters remain at a higher temperature and therefore, can sustain
aquatic organisms even in extreme cold.

Hydrological Cycle

The water we use keeps on cycling endlessly through the environment, which we
call as hydrological cycle.

1. The water from various moist surfaces evaporates and falls again on the earth in
the form of rain or snow and passes through living organisms and ultimately
returns to the oceans.
2. Every year about 104 inch thick layer of water evaporates from the oceans, more
than 90% of which returns to the oceans through hydrological cycle.

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3. Solar energy drives the water cycle by evaporating it from various water bodies,
which subsequently return through rainfall or snow.
4. Plants too play a very important role by absorbing the ground water from the soil
and releasing it into the atmosphere by the process of transpiration.
5. Global distribution of water resources is quite uneven depending upon several
geographic factors.
6. Tropical rain forest receive maximum rainfall while the major world deserts occur
in zones of dry, descending air(20-40 N and S) and receive very little rainfall.

Water Use And Over-Exploitation

 Due to its unique properties water is of multiple uses for all living organisms.
 Water is absolutely essential for life.
 Uptake of nutrients, their distribution in the body, regulation of temperature, and
removal of wastes are all mediated through water.
 Human beings depend on water for almost every developmental activity.
 Water is used for drinking, irrigation, and transportation, washing and waste
disposal for industries and used as a coolant for thermal power plants.
 Water shapes the earth‘s surface and regulates our climate.

Water use by humans is of two types:

(i )Water withdrawl : Taking water from ground water or surface water resource

(ii)Water consumption: The water which is taken up but not returned for reuse.

On a global average 70 percent of the water withdrawn is used for agriculture. In India,
we use 93% of water in agricultural sector while in a country like Kuwait, which is water
–poor ,only 4% is used in industry, which again varies from a high of 70% in European
countries to as 5% in less developed countries.

In USA, an average family consumes more than 1000m3 of water per year, which is
many times more than that in most developing countries.

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Ground water
About 9.86% of the total fresh water resources is in the form of groundwater and it is
about 35-50 times that of surface water supplies.
 Till some time back groundwater was considered to be very pure.
 However, of late, even groundwater aquifers have been found to be
contaminated by leachates from sanitary landfills etc.
 A layer of sediment or rock that is highly permeable and contains water
is called an aquifer.
 Layers of sand and gravel are good aquifers while clay and crystalline
rocks are not since they have low permeability.
 Aquifers may be of two types
(i)Unconfined aquifers : which are overlaid by permeable earth
materials and they are recharged by water seeping down from above in
the form of rainfall and snow melt.
(ii)Confined aquifers : which are sandwiched between two impermeable
layers of rock or sediments and are recharged only in those areas where
the aquifer intersects the land surface.

 Sometimes the recharged area is hundreds of kilometers away from the


location of the well.
 Groundwater is not static, it mover, though at a very slow rate of about a
meter or so in a year.
Effects of groundwater usage

(i)Subsidence:

 When groundwater withdrawal is more than its recharge rate, the


sediments in the aquifer get compacted, a phenomenon known as ground
subsidence.
 Huge economic losses may occur due to this phenomenon because it
results in the sinking of overlying land surface.
 The common problems associated with it include structural damage in
buildings, fracture in pipes, reversing the flow of sewers and canals and
tidal flooding.

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(ii)Lowering of water table :

 Mining of groundwater is done extensively in arid and semi-arid regions


for irrigating crop fields.
 However , it is not advisable to do excessive mining as it would cause a
sharp decline in future agricultural production, due to lowering of water
table.

(iii)Lowering of water table :

 Mining of groundwater is done extensively in arid and semi-arid regions


for irrigation crop fields.
 However, it is not advisable to do excessive mining as it would cause a
sharp decline in future agricultural production, due to lowering of water
table.
 Water logging:
 When excessive irrigation is done with brackish water it raises the water
table gradually leading to water-logging and salinity problems

Surface Water
 The water coming through precipitation when does not percolate down
into the ground or does not return ot the atmosphere as evaporation or
transpiration loss, assumes the form of streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands or
artificial reservoirs known as surface water.
 The surface water is largely used for irrigation, industrial use, public
water supply, navigation etc.
Floods:
An overflow of water, whenever the magnitude of water flow exceeds the carrying
capacity of channel within its banks is called as flood.

Causes of Floods:

Various causes of floods are..


 Heavy rainfall and sudden melting of ice.
 Insufficient water channel capacity of rivers.
 Construction of buildings, roads which prevents infiltration of water into soil.

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 Deforestation, overgrazing and mining increases the runoff from rains and hence
increases the flood level.
 Soil erosion and loss of vegetation would lead to flooding due to heavy rain.

Effects of Floods
 Flood water brings various diseases, flood kills human lives.
 Aquatic and wildlife habitats are destroyed by floods. This leads to loss of bio-
diversity due to migration of wildlife species to the adjoining areas.
 Flood causes economic loss, loss of crops, loss of livestock and property damage.
 Drainage system and public transport systems gets disrupted causing
inconvenience and discomfort to common public.
 Flood can cause slitting of dams, damage of bridges and damage of hydropower
plants.
 Agriculture produce can be submerged under flood water causing financial loss to
community.

Flood Management
 Construction of dams and reservoirs is an effective method of controlling floods.
 Advance metrological information can give enough time to active disaster
management systems.
 Hydro engineering operations in flood affected areas for proper diversion of flood
water.
 Construction of floodways and reserving green zone on the river banks.

Drought

 Drought is scarcity of water. Drought occurs due to inadequate rainfall, late arrival
of rains overutilization of ground water.
 The condition of dryness for prolonged period is called drought due to drop of
average rainfall. Drought cause famine and starvation of human & animal
population of region concerned. Drought is the most serious physical hazard to
agriculture.

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 Shortage of water for even the basic needs is the main problem in the drought
areas.
 Shallow rooted plants don’t grow. Infiltration wells, construction of dams, water
sheds are being taken up in drought prone areas.
 Clouds seeding techniques, artificial rains etc., are to be implemented.

Drought – damages:

Direct
 loss of income
 social dislocation
 famine/malnutrition/death
Indirect
 loss of rural and urban revenues
 fire hazard, loss of water access
Benefits of Dams

River valley projects with big dams have usually been considered to play a key role in
the development process due to their multiple uses.

India has the distinction of having the largest number of river-valley projects.

The tribals living in the area pin big hopes on these projects as they aim at providing
employment and raising the standard and quality of life.

The dams have tremendous potential for economic upliftment and growth.

They can help in checking floods and famines, generate electricity and reduce water and
power shortage, provide irrigation water to lower areas, provide drinking water in remote
areas and promote navigation, fishery etc.

Environmental Problems Due To Dams

The impacts can be at the upstream as well as downstream levels.

(A) The upstream problems include the following.

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(a) Displacement of tribal people
(b) Loss of forests, flora and fauna
(c) Changes in fisheries and the spawning grounds
(d) Siltation and sedimentation of reservoirs
(e) Loss of non-forest land
(f) Stagnation and water logging near reservoir
(g) Breeding of vectors and spread of vector-borne diseases
(h) Reservoir induced seismicity (RIS) causing earthquakes
(i) Growth of aquatic weeds.
(B) The downstream impacts include the following:

(a) Water logging and salinity due to over irrigation


(b) Micro-climatic changes
(c) Reduced water flow and silt deposition in river
(d) Flash floods
(e) Salt water intrusion at river mouth
(f) Loss of land fertility along the river since the sediments carrying
Nutrients get deposited in the reservoir
(g) Outbreak of vector-borne diseases like malaria
Thus, although dams are built to serve the society with multiple uses, but it has
several serious side-effects. That is why now there is a shift towards construction of
small dams or mini-hydel projects

Land Resources:-
 Land is the major part of the lithosphere.
 Land plays a major role for growth of crops, vegetation, forests etc.,
 Soils are formed due to disintegration of rocks by various physical processes like
change in temperature, pressure, blowing wind and flow of water.
 The top layer of soil consists of mixtures of Humus (dead leaves & plants), some
of the living organisms and Inorganic components which supply nutrients to the
soil. Soil fertility depends on inorganic matter, organic matter, water, air and a
variety of micro-organisms viz., bacteria, fungi, which help in the decomposition
of organic matter and regeneration of nutrients.
 Land is a physical entity which includes natural resources like forest, water,
minerals, food, energy and etc.

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 Land is the biggest resources for biotic community to reproduce, live, sustain,
grow, exploit and many life supporting activities.

 It is equally important to protect forests, grasslands, wetlands, mountains, coasts


etc. in order to presence biodiversity.

Soil composition:
Soil fertility depends four major components of soil are mineral materials,
organic matter, water and air.

• Mineral materials:

• Mineral materials elements (Si, Fe, O, Mg, Al, Ca, Na, K and etc..), quartz
(SiO2), iron-silicates and aluminum silicates.

• Organic matter:

• Came from the residues of plants and animals. Organic matter can be crop
residues, grasses, bacteria, fungi, other microorganisms and animal wastes.

Soil composition:

• Water:

• It is a good solvent for many nutrients which move into plant roots.

• Air:

• Air encourages optimum rate of the essential metabolic process of various


organisms.

• Land degradation:

• Any change in land that reduces its quality and productivity is referred land
degradation.

• The land degradation results in deterioration of soil or loss of fertility of the soil.

Soil Erosion:
The top layer of the earth is called as soil.

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• Soil erosion occurs due to deforestation, overgrazing, industrialization;
desertification etc.

• Soil is not immune to erosion, and like rocks along a coastline, soil can erode due
to the effects of forces, such as water, wind and farming practices.

• Soil is naturally created when small pieces of weathered rocks and minerals mix
with organic materials from decaying plants and animals.

• Soil creation is a slow process, taking many years. However, the soil that is
created is constantly subjected to natural and manmade forces that disrupt it.

Soil Erosion:

• Soil erosion is defined as the wearing away of topsoil.

• Topsoil is the top layer of soil and is the most fertile because it contains the most
organic, nutrient-rich materials.

• Therefore, this is the layer that farmers want to protect for growing their crops
and ranchers want to protect for growing grasses for their cattle to graze on.

• One of the main causes of soil erosion is water erosion, which is the loss of
topsoil due to water.

• Raindrops fall directly on topsoil.

• The impact of the raindrops loosens the material bonding it together, allowing
small fragments to detach.

• If the rainfall continues, water gathers on the ground, causing water flow on the
land surface, known as surface water runoff.

• This runoff carries the detached soil materials away and deposits them
elsewhere.

• There are some conditions that can accentuate surface water runoff and therefore
soil erosion.

• For example, if the land is sloped, there is a greater potential for soil erosion due

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to the simple fact that gravity pulls the water and soil materials down the slope.

• Also, water will have an easier time running across the surface, carrying topsoil
with it.

Types of Soil erosion:

There are different types of soil erosion caused by water.

1. Sheet erosion

2. Slip erosion

3. Rill erosion

4. Gully erosion

Sheet erosion:

• Sheet erosion is an erosion that occurs fairly evenly over an area.

• As raindrops loosen soil, the surface water runoff can transport topsoil in a
uniform fashion, almost like a bed sheet sliding off of a bed.

• This can be so subtle that it might not even be noticed until much of the valuable,
nutrient-rich topsoil has already been washed away.

• If a farmer heads out to his field and sees an accumulation of soil and crop
residue at one end of his field, he should be worried about sheet erosion.

Slip erosion:

• This occurs due to heavy rainfall on slopes of hills and mountains.

Rill Erosion:

• Rill erosion is erosion that results in small, short-lived and well-defined streams.

• When rainfall does not soak into the soil, it can gather on the surface and run
downhill, forming small channels of water called rills.

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• You can use this fact as a memory jogger if you remember that 'a little rill will
run downhill.

• ' A rill will dry up after the rainfall, but you may still see the stream bed that was
created by the temporary stream.

Gully Erosion:

• Gully erosion can be thought of as advanced rill erosion.

• In fact, if rills are not addressed, they will grow into larger gullies.

• Gully erosion can spell big problems for farmers because the affected land is not
able to be used for growing crops, and the big ditches create a hazard for the
farmer driving his farm machinery over the fields.

Causes for soil erosion:

• Deforestation: Mining, industrial, urban development etc causes deforestation


and leads to exposure of the land to wind and rains causing soil erosion. Cutting
trees leads to deforestation which in turn loss of organic matter in the soils. 

• Overgrazing: When sufficient amount of grass is available for the organisms


usually the entire land/area may be subjected to exhaust and the land is exposed
without grass and ultimately the land expose to wind/rain causing soil erosion.

• Industrialization: Different processes carried out by industries and mining


operations cause soil pollution which leads to degradation of land.

• Desertification: The process of conversion of productive lands to unproductive


lands is called desertification.

 Land degradation :

• Land degradation can be defined as any change in the land that alter its
conditions or reduces its quality.

Causes of Land degradation:

• Land degradation occurs due to both natural disasters like volcanic eruptions,

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earthquakes, heavy rains, fire etc or human induced activities.

• The other causes of land degradation consists of wind blow, salinity of water,
water logging, soil acidity, loss of flora and fauna.

• Desertification is land degradation occurring in the arid, semi-arid regions of the


world.

• These dry lands cover about 40% of the earth’s surface and puts at risk more than
1 billion people who are dependent on these lands for survival.

• Land clearing and deforestation, Mining activity in forest areas, urban


conversion, bringing more land under cultivation, soil pollution , loss of organic
matter in the soils, alkalinization of soils, salinity of water etc leads to land
degradation.

• Severe land degradation affects in decreasing the mineral wealth and economic
development of nations.

• The methods that are followed for the prevention of land degradation are called
soil conservation methods

Reasons of land degradation:

• Population: With rapid growth in population more land is needed for producing
food, wood, fiber and fuel. Thus land resources are over utilized causing land
degradation.

• Urbanization: Because of population urbanization also increases. The


urbanization leads to deforestation which effects millions of plants and animal
species.

• Fertilizers and pesticides: To improve the agricultural productivity, fertilizers


and pesticides are used on large scale. The excess use of fertilizers and pesticides
leads to pollution of land and water. Thus land (soil) gets degraded further.

• Damage to top soil: Increased food production causing damage of top soil
through nutrient depletion.

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• Water logging: The land productivity reduces because of rise in ground water
close to or above the soil surface cause water-logging. This is caused because of
incorrect irrigation management.

• Salination: The land degradation is caused by increases of salt in the soil or


intrusion of sea water into coastal land.

Renewable Energy:
• Those sources of energy which are inexhaustible and can be regenerated again and
again are called renewable sources of energy.
• Eg: Solar energy, wind energy, Ocean energy (Tidal and Ocean thermal energy-
OTE), Geothermal energy, Biomass energy, Hydropower energy, etc.,
Non-renewable Energy:
• Those sources of energy which are exhaustible and can’t be regenerated again and
again are called non-renewable sources of energy.
• Eg: Coal energy, Natural Gas energy (CH4), Liquefied Petroleum Gas – LPG
(Ethane, n-butane, iso-butane, butylenes and propane) etc.

Solar Energy:
Our sun is a natural nuclear reactor. It releases tiny packets of energy called photons,
which travel the 93 million miles from the sun to Earth in about 8.5 minutes.
step 1:  sunlight activates the panels.
• Each individual panel is constructed of a layer of silicon cells, a metal frame, a
glass casing surrounded by a special film, and wiring.  For maximum effect, the
panels are grouped together into “arrays” (an ordered series) and placed on
rooftops or in large outdoor spaces.  The solar cells, which are also referred to
as photovoltaic cells, absorb sunlight during daylight hours.  
step 2:  the cells produce electrical current
• Within each solar cell is a thin semiconductor wafer made from two layers of
silicon. One layer is positively charged, and the other negatively charged, forming
an electric field. When light energy from the sun strikes a photovoltaic solar cell, it
energizes the cell and causes electrons to ‘come loose’ from atoms within the
semiconductor wafer. Those loose electrons are set into motion by the electric
field surrounding the wafer, and this motion creates an electrical current. 

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step 3: the electrical energy is converted

• solar panels working efficiently to transform sunlight into electricity, but the
electricity generated is called direct current (or DC) electricity, which is not the
type of electricity that powers most homes, which is alternating current (or AC)
electricity. Fortunately, DC electricity can easily be changed into AC electricity by
a gadget called an inverter.

step 4:  the converted electricity powers your home

• Once the solar energy has been converted from DC to AC electricity, it runs
through your electrical panel and is distributed within the home to power your
appliances

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step 3: the electrical energy is converted

• solar panels working efficiently to transform sunlight into electricity, but the
electricity generated is called direct current (or DC) electricity, which is not the
type of electricity that powers most homes, which is alternating current (or AC)
electricity. Fortunately, DC electricity can easily be changed into AC electricity by
a gadget called an inverter.

step 4:  the converted electricity powers your home

• Once the solar energy has been converted from DC to AC electricity, it runs
through your electrical panel and is distributed within the home to power your
appliances

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Advantages:

1. Available for free of cost.

2. Absorbent plates on a roof can heat liquid in tubes that supply a house with hot
water.

3. solar cells generate energy for far-out places like satellites in Earth orbit and
cabins deep in the Rocky Mountains.

4. solar thermal power plants employ various techniques to concentrate the sun's
energy as a heat source (Solar heat collectors).

5. The heat is then used to boil water (any liquid with low boiling point) to drive a
steam turbine that generates electricity

6. Solar energy is an inexhaustible fuel s.ource that is pollution free and often noise
free.

Disadvantages:

1. Solar energy doesn't work at night without a storage device such as a battery

2. Cloudy weather can make the technology unreliable during the day.

3. Solar technologies are also very expensive

4. Require a lot of land area to collect the sun's energy at rates useful to lots of
people.

5. Skilled manpower required for installation windows placed on the sunny side of a
building allow sunlight to heat-

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2.Wind Energy:

• Wind energy is the kinetic energy associated with the movement of atmospheric
air. Wind mills convert the wind energy into electrical energy.

• The efficiency of wind mill is increased with the speed of wind and length of rotor
blade. The total wind energy potential in India’s estimate is 25,000 MW .

• Wind energy is a source of renewable power which comes from air current
flowing across the earth's surface.

• Wind turbines harvest this kinetic energy and convert it into usable power which
can provide electricity for domestic, industrial and agriculture sectors.

Advantages:

1. Wind energy is one of the fastest growing sources of new electricity generation in
the world today. These growth trends can be linked to the multi-dimensional
benefits associated with wind energy.

2. The electricity produced from wind power is said to be eco-friendly because its
generation produces no pollution or greenhouse gases.

3. It is good for health and environmental safe.

4. Available for free of cost.

5. Wind is a renewable energy resource, it is inexhaustible.

6. From wind energy one can locally produce electricity.

Disadvantages:

1. Generates noise pollution.

2. The amount of electricity generated depends on the strength of the wind - if there
is no wind, there is no electricity

3. Wind energy is that winds can never be predicted.

4. Wind mill kills birds.

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5. cyclones cause heavy damage.

6. Skilled manpower is required for installation

Geothermal energy:

• As the name suggests (geo = earth and therme = heat), geothermal energy comes
from heat produced by the Earth. Geothermal energy found within rock
formations.

• Beneath the surface (or crust) of the Earth, there are a number of heat-producing
layers of rock and minerals.The deeper you dig towards the center of the Earth, the
hotter it gets.

• Geysers (a natural spring that emits hot water ) and hot springs are examples for
geothermal energy where the steam and hot water come to the surface, in areas
where the steam is tapped by drilling. The obtained steam is then used to generate
power.

• Geothermal power plants also harness the heat of the Earth through hot water and
steam.

• In these plants, heat is used to generate electricity by rotation of turbines with hot
steam gush out through the pipe.

• In fact, the core (about 4,000 miles beneath the surface), can reach temperatures of
4200 ºC.

• The temperature gradient in earth anatomy can be used for the production of
electricity.

• This heat which can be harnessed for energy is caused by residual heat from the
formation of the Earth, as well as decay of radioactive isotopes.

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Advantages:

1. It is a renewable source of energy.

2. It is non-polluting and environment friendly.

3. There is no wastage or generation of by-products.

4. Geothermal energy can be used directly. In ancient times, people used this source
of energy for heating homes, cooking, etc.

5. Maintenance cost of geothermal power plants is very less.

6. Geothermal power plants don't occupy too much space and thus help in protecting
natural environment.

7. Unlike solar energy, it is not dependent on the weather conditions.

Disadvantages:

1. Only few sites have the potential of Geothermal Energy.

2. Most of the sites, where geothermal energy is produced, are far from markets or
cities, where it needs to be consumed.

3. Total generation potential of this source is too small.

4. There is always a danger of eruption of volcano.

5. Installation cost of steam power plant is very high.

6. There is no guarantee that the amount of energy which is produced will justify the
capital expenditure and operations costs.

7. It may release some harmful, poisonous gases that can escape through the holes
drilled during construction.

8. Earth quakes cause damage to the plants.

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Hydroelectric Energy

• Electrical power is generated by hydro-electric projects in which dams are


constructed across the river.

• Dams can generate electricity because they contain special mechanisms designed
to take the energy in flowing water and turn it into electrical power.

• dams can store and direct large volumes of water. Hydroelectric power is
becoming increasingly popular.

• Hydroelectric power, or hydroelectricity, is basically electrical energy that has


been generated using natural forces such as gravity or flowing water.

• A power source is used to spin a turbine basically a propeller which in turn spins a
metal shaft, forming the equivalent of an electrical generator that produces and
stores electricity.

• The power source, in the case of hydropower, is water itself. When water moves a
turbine, the turbine spins, and electromagnets in the turbine generate an electric
current in the stationary coils of wire inside them.

• The kinetic energy of water is converted into mechanical energy by means of


turbines and in turn, the mechanical energy is transferred into electrical energy by
generators.

Advantages:

1. Hydropower is a fueled by water, so it's a clean fuel source 

2. Hydropower doesn't pollute the air like power plants that burn

3. Hydropower is a domestic source of energy, produced in the United States.
Hydropower is generally available as needed, engineers can control the flow of 
water through the turbines to produce electricity on demand.

4. Hydropower plants provide benefits in addition to clean electricity. 

5. Other benefits may include water supply and flood control.

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Disadvantages:

• Fish populations can be impacted if fish cannot migrate one place to another place.

• Hydropower can impact water quality and flow. 

• Hydropower plants can cause low dissolved oxygen levels in the water.

• When water is not available, the hydropower plants can't produce electricity.

• New hydropower facilities impact the local environment and may compete with ot
her use for the land.

• Humans, flora, and fauna may lose their natural habitat.

Non – renewable energy resources :

• Non-renewable resources are the fossil fuels such as coal, crude oil, natural gas

Fossil fuels:

• Fossil means the remains of an animal or a plant which have become hard and
turned into rock.

• All these found in earth’s crust which has been formed in the past by the
geological processes.

• Fossil fuels are solid coal , liquid (crude oil / petroleum) and gases (natural gas).

Coal:

• Coal is a fossil fuel which occurs in the layers of earth’s crust.

• Coal is a combustible black or brownish-black sedimentary rock, formed as rock


strata called coal seams.

• Coal is mostly carbon with variable amounts of other elements,


chiefly hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen. 

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• Because of environmental hazards, trees were buried inside the earth. By the
action of temperature, pressure and bacterial actions over a period of thousands of
years, they converted into a brown-black solid named coal (or)

• It is formed by the partial decay of plant materials accumulated millions of years


ago and further altered by the action of heat and pressure.

Coal:

Advantages:

1. Coal is one of the major source of energy in many industries such as steel, cement
and paper, because of its easy availability and least risk of fire hazards.

Disadvantages:

1. Coal is extracted by the process of mining and involves accidents due to mine
collapse, ground water pollution, accumulation of poisonous material, explosive
gases etc cause diseases. CO2 pollution leads to green house effect (global
warming).

Crude oil:

1. Petroleum is one of the best primary liquid fuel. It is also known as crude oil. The
word meaning of petroleum is ‘rock oil’ (petra = rock, oleum= oil).

2. Petroleum is dark-brown viscous liquid. Petroleum is a mineral found deep in


earth’s crust.

3. It is a mixture of number of hydrocarbons (paraffins, olefins, aromatics and


naphthalene), nitrogen, sulphur, oxygen etc.

4. The unpleasant odour of petroleum is due to the presence of some foul smelling
sulphur compounds.

Crude oil:

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• The crude oil is heated up to 400oC in the oil refinery and condense the vapours of
hydro – carbons. Petrol and other petroleum products are refined fuels from crude
oil.

• Petrol, diesel, kerosene are main liquid fuels.

• They are secondary liquid fuels derived from petroleum.

Crude oil:

• Advantages:

• These fuels are used for domestic works, auto vehicles and power generation.

• Petroleum products are used in large quantities in the manufacture of detergents,


plastics, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, synthetic rubber etc.

Natural Gas:

• Gas deposits are trapped from the sedimentary formations by means drilling holes
into the rock formations.

• The natural gas is obtained from the wells dug in the earth during mining of
petroleum.

• It is mainly composed of methane and small quantities of ethane along with other
hydrocarbons.

• While burning of natural gas, the emission of CO2 is less and thus reduces green
house effect and global warming.

Advantages:

• A total of 734 billion cubic mts of gas is estimated as proven reserves.

• It is an excellent domestic fuel which can be conveyed through pipelines to longer


distances.

• A large number of chemicals are synthesized from natural gas.

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• It is also used as raw material for the manufacture of carbon-black which is used
as filler for rubber and hydrogen is used in synthesis of ammonia.

• Methane on microbiological fermentation gives synthetic proteins which are used


as animal feed.

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