Hydroelectric energy is electricity and is put on the national grid for use by the public. It is used for pretty much every modern process of anything, in some way or another.
The power to run early grain mills came from hydroelectric energy provided through water wheels.
Hydroelectric power plants. They have dams and generators. Water flows through a dam, which spins generators that produce hydroelectric electricity. (Fun Fact: The Hoover Dam is the biggest hydroelectric power plant.)
One advantage of using hydroelectric energy is that it is a renewable source of energy. Other positive aspects include a guarantee in energy and price stability as well as its feasibility in utilizing other renewable sources.
coaled power, gas powered, wind turbines, nuclear energy, i believe are not examples of hydroelectric power
crackheads
Since hydroelectric energy supplies electricity, any industry that uses electricity from a hydroelectric plant relies on this energy.
Solar energy is generated using solar panels that face the sun and gather the energy. Hydroelectric energy is generated by rushing water. The intense pressure creates a large amount of energy. Basically, solar energy uses the sun, and hydroelectric energy uses water.
Hydroelectric energy uses water to turn large turbines in damns to generate electricity, while wind energy uses wind to turn wind turbines to generate electricity.
Anything that uses electricity. Hydroelectric energy is just energy created by water spinning turbines which uses giant capacitors to store and transmit energy. things: lighting houses, appliances, street lights, computers, TVs, ect....anything that uses electricity
yes.Singapore uses energy from running water.That's what dams and reservoirs are for.
This is renewable energy, it uses water to push the turbine that powers the generator that makes electricity, so as long as there is water there will be Hydroelectric power. :)
the one uses water and the other uses coal
hydroelectric power
Hydroelectric energy uses water. Thermal energy uses heat. Simple Science! Duh!
the difference between the hydroelectric energy and the hydrothermal is hydrothermal is using geothermal heat (hot rocks) to create electricity by pumping it while the hydroelectric energy it uses the high dams and waterfall to create electricity.
hydroelectric energy is energy that comes from water
No hydroelectric uses water, usually stored behind a dam to drive a turbine. The hot rocks you speak of is geothermal energy. The most prolific use of geothermal energy is in Iceland.