The idea is to harness the potential energy of the water, when it is at a certain height. The water has to be made to go down, to harness this energy.
Building of dams to harness water energy destroys habitat for many species, including endangered species.
No
Sun radiation makes sea water hot, which then evaporates and becomes clouds, some clouds go over land and condense producing rain thus producing rivers which we harness using electric generators.
You can't really harness energy from it, since there isn't any stored energy (except for nuclear fusion, for which we don't have the technology yet). However, you can store energy as hydrogen, to retrieve it later.
Wind turbines.
Building of dams to harness water energy destroys habitat for many species, including endangered species.
yes, water is heated by earth's interior and converted to steam
By using hydro powered stations that can turn water into energy to power your house. It also is harnessed by water turbines to filter the unwanted in the water.
include the use of photovoltaic systems, concentrated solar power and solar water heating to harness the energy budnetdesign.com
Yes, and No. In the past a number of ways to harness the power of water have been used. Time will tell if they can be used in the future.
No
They harness wind energy and convert this to mechanical energy to grid flower or pump water or to drive a generator to make electricity.
buttholes
By pumping cold water into a fissure and making use of the heated water. Either by pre-warming it before heating further, thus saving energy, or if the water turns to steam, using that to drive turbines.
It is usually from large rivers, dams or waterfalls like Niagara falls. They harness the energy of the moving water to turn the turbines that drive the generators. Like a hose pointed at a pinwheel/fan.
The energy of chocolate is harnessed by the simple expedient of eating it.
Sun radiation makes sea water hot, which then evaporates and becomes clouds, some clouds go over land and condense producing rain thus producing rivers which we harness using electric generators.