When heat is removed from the hot rocks underground (by cycling water down to them) the rocks renew their heat from the nearby lava and magma. It is very rare that this doesn't happen quickly.
The main thing that keeps geothermal energy from being in widespread use is that it is not easily available everywhere. Currently geothermal energy is mainly used in places where volcanic activity and the related heat is relatively close to the surface.
Geothermal energy is NOT from the sun. Geothermal energy is from heat inside the earth!
Yes, fundamentally geothermal energy is NOT a renewable resource. The souge heat for geothermal energy is the heat from Earth's core (caused by the fission of heavy, radioactive isotopes). This heat is dissipating and will not be renewed. Also where geothermal energy is extracted, the turnover rate in the crustal rocks is so slow that the heat source is quickly cooled to the point of exhaustion. (Note, highly volcanic areas are an exception to this).
geothermal energy is geothermal power harnessed from the Earth itself
The volcano may not be a type of geothermal energy but lava is surely a type of geothermal energy.
Yes hydrogen can be easily renewed by separating it from water or extracting it from gasoline
Strictly speaking geothermal energy is not renewable as we can't grow or make new energy to replace it. It is however essentially inexhaustible as it is renewed by processes like radioactive decay and tidal friction in the magma.
Geothermal energy is constantly being renewed from below, by heat from the interior of the Earth. The limit is on how much energy can be extracted at a continuous rate, so that there is no lapse in the supply while the rocks are reheated.
Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.
Yes it can it is just one of many renewable energy here are some: Solar Tide Hydro wind geothermal nuclear
Wind energy is renewed when the wind starts blowing and the turbines start spinning. since wind energy is renewable you don't have to worry about it running out-as long as the wind blows- so as long as the wind blows, wind energy will always be renewed
The main thing that keeps geothermal energy from being in widespread use is that it is not easily available everywhere. Currently geothermal energy is mainly used in places where volcanic activity and the related heat is relatively close to the surface.
Geothermal energy is NOT from the sun. Geothermal energy is from heat inside the earth!
my answer is the heat energy is magmaThe heat energy in earths crust is geothermal energy
No. Geothermal energy comes from the earth's core!
Yes, fundamentally geothermal energy is NOT a renewable resource. The souge heat for geothermal energy is the heat from Earth's core (caused by the fission of heavy, radioactive isotopes). This heat is dissipating and will not be renewed. Also where geothermal energy is extracted, the turnover rate in the crustal rocks is so slow that the heat source is quickly cooled to the point of exhaustion. (Note, highly volcanic areas are an exception to this).
geothermal energy is geothermal power harnessed from the Earth itself