Hydrogen is a nonrenewable source of energy when used for nuclear fusion (which is still not a technologically attainable power generation mechanism).
When used as an energy carrier for oxidation (e.g. fuel cell, and internal combustion engine) hydrogen is not an energy source. In such applications, hydrogen is a man-made resource.
hydrogen is a renewable energy source
tidal energy is inexhaustible because we cannot use up all of the ocean. tides will still go in and out
it is non-renewable, once it is used it can never be used again
Electricity is a secondary power source. It depends on what is used to generate it. Wind, water or solar are all renewable or use little or nothing after the original manufacture of the component's.
The difference between renewable and nonrenewable energy is: renewable doesn't make pollution, and also you don't have to spend fuel or other stuff just to generate electricity.
The term Nonrenewable energy is used for Energy that could run out or deplete. Renewable energy is just the Opposite, Energy that can be used again and again. Examples: NR - Coal, Oil. R - Solar, Wind.
no, it is a renewable energy source.
Renewable of course.
some energy sources are non renewable but some are renewable
geothermal energy is a renewable energy source: similar to wind, solar, etc.
no it renewable
Trees are renewable. You can grow a tree. Coal is not it is a fossil fuel.
Wind turbines produce renewable energy. Energy is considered renewable when it is created by a source that is inexhaustible.
True. Tidal energy is renewable energy source.
All renewable energy sources are continuously renewed from energy from the sun, but of course ultimately the sun is nonrenewable.
geothermal energy is a renewable source, so it will never ever run out.
Well we all know is not nonrenewable but all i think it's renewable or inexhaustible i think both.
Assuming solar energy is to be classed as a renewable energy source, around 90% of the planets in our solar system are not effected at all by nonrenewable energy.