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1 Ans How long will the fossil fuel burn?

Asked by Tajrimun Elisha (2 Golds) Monday, 02 Sep 2019, 10:41 PM at (Technology Products)

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The world is counting down the trend towards large-scale industries, regardless of the environment. But there is a lot of earth in the middle of one world. The fact is that the energy needs of the developed countries are very high, and its tariffs are calculated as the environment of the less developed countries. But there are other problems as well. Especially in a country like India. With their improvement, the number of middle class is increasing rapidly. The inevitable consequence of this is that the demand for energy will increase enormously. Where will his money come from? How much pollution will be provided in that environment? Technology will surely improve, green, but the next question remains.

Let's give a little account. Now the average power consumption per Earth is 2.5 kW. Of course, different ratios in different countries. For example, in England, 5 kilowatts, in America 1, about fifty times that of ordinary Bangladeshi people. By 20, the energy demand will be at least one and a half times. Eighty percent of this energy comes from fossil fuels. That means mainly burning coal and petroleum or natural gas. The rest is from various other sources, such as hydropower, nuclear power, solar power, and so on.

How is the picture of India? Sixty percent of the energy comes from fossils, fifty percent from coal, ten from gas, less than one percent from oil. Hydropower is about 20 percent. The rest is based on another source. So much trouble with nuclear power in the middle of it, so many protests come from just three percent. In the coming days, environmental pollution will increase steadily as additional energy demand continues to be fueled. There is no other way. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has emphasized that power generation from various alternative sources like wind, solar, nuclear, ground heat, etc. should be increased many times. He started construction of a 1000 MW solar power plant in Ahmedabad.

The potential for solar power in India is enormous. The sun is a natural nuclear fusion, providing immense wealth of energy and energy, wanting a great deal of exploitation. But photovoltaic cells are still very expensive. Conscientious research needs to reduce its costs. If the history of nuclear energy were to be seen, at one time very expensive, but with the advancement of technology, now thermal power has come to a close. This improvement is also essential in solar power. It is my hope that the importance of this source will be increased from three percent to at least ten percent with special emphasis on nuclear power generation. But the obstacle to mistrust lies in the way that this hope is fulfilled, the obstacle that has grown since the Fukushima disaster. These barriers must be overcome. Sadly, not a single nuclear reactor is available in all of Eastern India. As a result, we are depriving ourselves of not just energy supply but an overall development opportunity. And I'll end by saying one of the great possibilities. Its name is geothermal energy, energy obtained from underground heat. There is a lot of future in the US, which is estimated to provide 30 percent of this energy source in the United States, ten percent in Mexico. But India still has the initiative to find this source, in a word, Big Zero. In this context, it is good to say that helium gases come out from underground near Vikas in Bikram, we are doing research there. I will test very soon, the bottom of the underground, how much heat is rising, helium or how much can be found? I believe success will be ours. We can exploit the energy that nature itself provides from its chest.

'This earth, this air, this country, this water we did not get as property to our ancestors, our children deserve it. Therefore, we have got this wealth from them, we must ensure that they get this world at least in the condition I got. ā€¯Mahatma has said this. It is our duty to remember.

Answered by Tajrimun Elisha (2 Golds) Monday, 02 Sep 2019, 10:42 PM

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