Solar energy is stored in coal and petroleum.
Chemical. Any type of combustion is a chemical change.
Driving short distances when you could walk is a really common energy waster!!!!!!!
Wind energy should be widely accepted as it produces energy which doesn't pollute the environment . Artifical resources such as petroleum , diesel destroy the ozone layer of the Earth . Wind energy does not pollute the environment . So wind energy should be accepted and widely launched .
Three possibilities: Petroleum (23%) + Natural Gas (30%) = 53% or Natural Gas (30%) + Uranium (nuclear energy) (33%) = 63% or Petroleum (23%) + Uranium (33%) = 56% A forth is possible if you consider: Uranium (33%) + Renewable energy (8%) = 41%
It is very limmited you don't need a lot of petrolium to make energy it is nonrenewable it is exhaustible
Gdhddhchic
Petroleum energy is energy derived from petroleum products: gasoline, diesel fuel, heating oil, etc.
No, it is completely different. Petroleum is a fossil fuel
Petroleum provides about 35% of the world's total energy consumption.
Petroleum contains chemical energy that is released when it is burned to produce heat and power. This energy comes from the carbon and hydrogen molecules present in petroleum.
Potential energy is obtained from petroleum as a stored energy source. When petroleum is burned, the chemical potential energy stored within it is converted into heat energy that can be used to generate electricity or power vehicles.
Petroleum is considered a non-renewable energy because it is a fossil fuel.
The energy from the petroleum is only accessable when the fuel is burnt, if the petroleum itself doesn't undergo burning the energy isn't released. So the energy is called 'stored' or 'potential' energy.
Petroleum
The energy in petroleum and coal is stored as chemical energy. This energy is released when these substances are burned, producing heat and other forms of energy.
The energy in petroleum comes from organic matter, such as phytoplankton and algae, that lived millions of years ago. Over time, this organic matter was buried and subjected to heat and pressure, resulting in the formation of petroleum. When we burn petroleum, the stored energy is released as heat and light energy.