Coal are form when we burn trees.
oil is form from the remains of animals and plant that lived millions of years ago in water environment.
Petrochemicals are primarily derived from petroleum, which is a type of fossil fuel. While some petrochemicals can be derived from coal through coal gasification and coal-to-chemical processes, the majority come from crude oil.
Coal can be converted to oil . The South African's during the years of Apartheid, when they suffered a trade embargo on oil, developed the industrial process of converting coal to oil, viz. SASOL. South Africa has millions of tons of coal that can be mined.
Coal is to oil as mine is to minerals. Both coal and oil are fossil fuels extracted from the earth, just as minerals are extracted from mines.
When oil and coal are combined together, they form a significant part of the world's energy sources. Both resources are non-renewable fossil fuels extracted from the Earth and are major contributors to global energy production and carbon emissions.
Carbon in coal is oxidized to form carbon dioxide gas when coal is burned.
dead animals and matter all get compressed at extremely high temperatures over millions and millions of years and eventually form coal and oil. So technically, coal and oil will run out for us but in millions more years, if there are civilisations still on earth, there will be plenty of coal and oil again. won't be any use to us though
Oil, coal, and gas. Oil is pumped out of the ground, coal is mined, and gas is also pumped
No. coal is a source of energy collected from the earth. It is a form of oil that is not finished yet.
Water and Carbon dioxide?
Acid rain
Use water and coal. :D
coal and oil come from many different places. Like coal from mines. oil from the ground.
Coal AND Oil
1. Oil 2. Coal 3. Natural Gas...
Some are: coal, oil and natural gas. It took millions of years for them to form and if we use them up, there would not be enough time for them to form again.
We still have some decades of oil reserves yet, much of which is in the form of shale oil. We continue improving shale oil recovery techniques so that some of the reserves once considered unrecoverable may now be claimed. As for coal, we have several centuries of supply of it, at current consumption rates. The wisdom of liberating all the carbon trapped in coal into our atmosphere in the form of CO2 is, however, highly questionable.
Coal, oil, and/or natural gas.