Why not
include hydroelectricity, which is the largest source of clean electricity globally?
Why not
include hydroelectricity, which is the largest source of clean electricity globally?
New England can support renewables development and make renewable generation,
including hydroelectricity, 57 % of its energy mix by 2030.
Including hydroelectricity, 57 % of the Northeast's energy must be renewable by 2030.
After being heavily lobbied, however, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recognized imported power,
including hydroelectricity, as an important way for states to comply with the new federal emission rules.
Not exact matches
Renewable energy sources,
including wind, geothermal, solar and
hydroelectricity, accounted for one - fifth of total electricity generated in the first quarter of 2017, according to the Energy Information Administration — and it's expected to continue growing.
Other targets announced by Rousseff
include 12 million hectares of reforestation, 5 million hectares of crops - livestock - forestry integration, the end of illegal deforestation, and meeting 45 % of the country's energy needs with renewables — up from a 40 % share today — largely thanks to
hydroelectricity and sugarcane ethanol.
Inventions such as steel skyscrapers and the discovery of germ - based medicine will be
included alongside guns and
hydroelectricity.
The City of Eugene has developed and is implementing strategies
include increasing water conservation; increasing investment in the urban forest; removing essential services from the 100 - year flood zone; and increasing energy efficiency to reduce demand for
hydroelectricity, a resource that is expected to decline with climate change; conducting a food security assessment
While conventional hydropower will continue to grow as dams are completed in China, Brazil and a scattering of other countries,
including Ethiopia, Malaysia, and Turkey, there exists enormous potential for non-conventional
hydroelectricity generation from tidal and wave projects, as well as from small in - stream projects that will not require new dams.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration
includes the following in U.S. primary energy production: coal production, waste coal supplied, and coal refuse recovery; crude oil and lease condensate production; natural gas plant liquids production; dry natural gas excluding supplemental gaseous fuels production; nuclear electricity net generation (converted to Btu using the nuclear plant heat rates); conventional
hydroelectricity net generation (converted to Btu using the fossil - fuels plant heat rates); geothermal electricity net generation (converted to Btu using the fossil - fuels plant heat rates), and geothermal heat pump energy and geothermal direct use energy; solar thermal and photovoltaic electricity net generation (converted to Btu using the fossil - fuels plant heat rates), and solar thermal direct use energy; wind electricity net generation (converted to Btu using the fossil - fuels plant heat rates); wood and wood - derived fuels consumption; biomass waste consumption; and biofuels feedstock.
Generally, these resources
include wind, solar, geothermal, biomass, and some types of
hydroelectricity, but may
include other resources such as landfill gas, municipal solid waste, and tidal energy.