Home / Ostalo / The Matters Of Energy

The Matters Of Energy

In reality, studies show that investments to 1. _ renewable energy and boost energy efficiency generate far more jobs than oil and coal.

It is not so much that 2._ fuels and other 3._ energy sources are causing great concern because they will not be around for much longer and have been identified as chief 4._. It is rather the soaring price of 5._ oil and the effects it has on our budgets that explain it better. This proves that money is the best 6._ of change; the rise in oil prices has impact on airline and transportation companies in general as well as shipping companies. This is in turn raising prices of all consumer goods and not only 7._ bills. And this has a direct impact on our lives now.

For some time biomass was seen as a sort of 8._ for the energy problem. The energy generated in that way does not cause pollution and is obtained from otherwise useless waste and specially grown 9._ crops. Unfortunately, it turned out there is not enough waste so farmers, who did not want to miss the 10._ opportunity, started growing corn and 11._ beet at the expense of food crops. This is nowadays blamed for the increase in food prices and various officials who see the bigger picture are now 12._ governments to stop promoting this practice. Even 13._ nuclear energy is making a come-back because it does not pollute, immediately. A lot of money has gone into researching hydrogen as a substitute for petrol. However, hydrogen is presently most economically produced using fossil fuels. Together with technological challenges involved in its storing, hydrogen economy still has a long way to go.

Some countries are, however, making the shift. Renewable energy in Iceland supplies over 70% of its energy needs. Britain could make use of wind power, Norway hydro and central Europe biomass and geo-thermal. There is also 14._ and wave power which is already widely used in Scotland. Solar power shows great promise as well. Covering just 0.5% of the world’s hot deserts with a technology called concentrated solar power (CSP) would, according to some scientists, provide the world’s entire electricity needs, with desalinated water as a valuable 15._. The governments in developed western countries have drawn up detailed plans on how to gradually reduce carbon emissions and 16._ greater percentages of their energy from these renewable sources. Undeveloped countries contribute much less to pollution due to their low standard of living. However, their legitimate rise out of poverty might 17._ some bad news for the environment. The best alternative is 18._. Not because of the government’s 19._ or restrictions; not even for the sake of future generations but because of ourselves here and now. And if the only language that 20._ the noise of everyday rush for money is money itself, let it talk.