Ethanol, hydroelectricity, and solar power are renewable resources that are not likely to run out in the next 200 years.
Ethanol, hydroelectricity, and solar power are renewable resources that are not likely to run out in the next 200 years.
Ethanol, hydroelectricity, and solar power are renewable resources that are not likely to run out in the next 200 years.
Nuclear power is least likely to run out in the next 200 years due to its reliance on uranium and other fissile materials which are more abundant than traditional fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas. Additionally, ongoing research and development in nuclear technology may lead to the utilization of alternative fuel sources such as thorium in the future.
Fossil fuels. This includes petroleum and coal.
The solar energy source is the sun. As far as humans are concerned, the sun will always be there, unchanging. Every new day you can go out and get some more sunshine (if not too cloudy), so that fits my understanding of a renewable source-one that will never run out. Of course the sun will eventually run out, probably exploding and burning up the earth completely. Mankind will disappear unless we have emigrated to another solar system. However that is way way in the future, and as far as we are concerned, for the next few million years, solar energy is here to stay.
Ethanol, hydroelectricity, and solar power are renewable resources that are not likely to run out in the next 200 years.
Ethanol, hydroelectricity, and solar power are renewable resources that are not likely to run out in the next 200 years.
no se next please
Frayde not.
That seems very likely. We MAY run out of fossil fuels around that time, but it is likely that the Sun will continue shining... for the next 5 billion years or so.
Nuclear power is least likely to run out in the next 200 years due to its reliance on uranium and other fissile materials which are more abundant than traditional fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas. Additionally, ongoing research and development in nuclear technology may lead to the utilization of alternative fuel sources such as thorium in the future.
Fossil fuels. This includes petroleum and coal.
Crude oil and natural gas are the natural resources that are likely to be scarce in the next 100 years or so.
While I wouldn't really want to store any of those next to a heat source, it is the aerosol can that is likely to explode.
The solar energy source is the sun. As far as humans are concerned, the sun will always be there, unchanging. Every new day you can go out and get some more sunshine (if not too cloudy), so that fits my understanding of a renewable source-one that will never run out. Of course the sun will eventually run out, probably exploding and burning up the earth completely. Mankind will disappear unless we have emigrated to another solar system. However that is way way in the future, and as far as we are concerned, for the next few million years, solar energy is here to stay.
change question
energy imported from mars, since it is closer to sun, can get better salor energy stored than from earth. Only problem is the transpotation of energy from mars to earth.