The key idea
Resource choices depend on reliability, environmental impact and cost, not only whether a resource is renewable.
Use the labels to explain the scientific relationship shown.
The bit that matters
Short notes first. Learn the idea, then use the worked example and questions to check it properly.
Renewable and non-renewable
A renewable energy resource is one that is replenished as fast as it is used, so it will not run out, for example wind, solar, hydroelectric, tidal, geothermal and biofuel.Non-renewable resources, including the fossil fuels coal, oil and gas, and nuclear fuel, are used faster than they form and will eventually run out.Most of our energy still comes from non-renewable resources.
Fossil fuels and nuclear
Fossil fuels are burned to release energy reliably and on demand, but they release carbon dioxide, contributing to global warming, and burning coal and oil also releases sulfur dioxide, which causes acid rain.Nuclear power produces no carbon dioxide while running but creates radioactive waste that stays dangerous for thousands of years and carries the risk of a major accident.
Renewable resources
Wind and solar are clean but unreliable because output depends on the weather and time of day.Hydroelectric and tidal are reliable and clean but need specific locations and can disrupt habitats.Geothermal is reliable where hot rocks are near the surface.Biofuels are roughly carbon neutral overall, but using farmland for fuel can reduce food production.
Reliability and environmental impact
Choosing a resource means weighing reliability, cost and environmental impact.Fossil fuels and nuclear give a steady supply that can meet peak demand, while many renewables fluctuate.Society increasingly favours renewables to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, but the change is slow because of cost, the need for a reliable supply, and existing infrastructure.
Definitions to learn
Renewable resource
An energy resource that is replenished as fast as it is used.
Non-renewable resource
An energy resource used faster than it forms, which will run out.
Fossil fuel
A fuel formed from ancient organisms, such as coal, oil or gas.
Reliable resource
One that can supply energy whenever it is needed.
Carbon neutral
Releasing no net carbon dioxide over its whole cycle.
Give one advantage and one disadvantage of using wind turbines.
Choose a specific benefit.
Choose a specific limitation.
They produce no fuel emissions while operating, but their output is intermittent.
For 'compare' questions, make a direct comparison in one sentence: 'Solar is renewable but intermittent, whereas nuclear is reliable but produces radioactive waste.' Avoid listing points separately.
Do not claim that every renewable resource works continuously.
How to score full marks
- 1Nuclear fuel is non-renewable even though it is not a fossil fuel.
- 2When comparing resources, give both an advantage and a disadvantage to gain full marks.
- 3Link fossil fuels to carbon dioxide and global warming, and coal or oil to sulfur dioxide and acid rain.
Try these yourself
Start with the core skill, then open the answer only after you have attempted the full question.
1Explain why gas power stations can be useful when electricity demand suddenly rises.
- 1.Think about response time and reliability.
2Compare solar power with nuclear power for generating electricity.
- 1.Compare reliability.
- 2.Compare emissions or waste.
3Suggest why a country may use a mixture of energy resources.
- 1.Consider demand, reliability and environmental impact.
4Name two renewable energy resources.[2 marks]
- 1.Renewable means it does not run out.
- 2.Choose any two from the standard list.
5Explain why solar power is described as unreliable.[2 marks]
- 1.Think about when solar panels can generate.
- 2.Link output to conditions.
6State one advantage and one disadvantage of using nuclear power instead of coal.[2 marks]
- 1.Compare emissions during running.
- 2.Compare waste or risk.
7Give one environmental problem caused by burning fossil fuels and explain its effect.[2 marks]
- 1.Identify a gas released.
- 2.State the consequence.
8A coastal town wants to switch from a gas power station to renewable generation. Discuss the factors it should consider when choosing between a tidal barrage and wind turbines.[4 marks]
- 1.Consider reliability of each.
- 2.Consider environmental and habitat impact.
- 3.Consider location and cost.
- 4.Reach a balanced comparison.
9State what is meant by a 'carbon neutral' energy resource and explain whether biofuels are truly carbon neutral.[4 marks]
- 1.Define carbon neutral in terms of net CO2.
- 2.Consider CO2 absorbed when crops grow.
- 3.Consider CO2 released when burned.
- 4.Evaluate any net difference.
10Explain why hydroelectric power stations are described as reliable but also have significant environmental disadvantages.[3 marks]
- 1.Reliability: water can be released on demand.
- 2.Environmental: habitat destruction.
- 3.Environmental: flooding of land.
- 4.Environmental: disruption to fish migration.
11A student says: 'We should switch entirely to wind power to stop climate change.' Evaluate this statement, considering both the science and the practicalities.[4 marks]
- 1.Acknowledge that wind power is low-carbon.
- 2.Point out the intermittency problem.
- 3.Consider need for backup or storage.
- 4.Consider scale of infrastructure change needed.
- 5.Conclude with a balanced judgement.
12Compare nuclear power and natural gas as energy resources. In your answer, refer to reliability, carbon emissions, waste products and risk.[4 marks]
- 1.Reliability of each.
- 2.Carbon emissions of each.
- 3.Waste products of each.
- 4.Risk associated with each.
13A government must decide how to meet rising electricity demand over the next 50 years. Discuss, in detail, the scientific, economic and environmental arguments for and against a strategy that uses a mixture of offshore wind, nuclear power and natural gas. Your answer should evaluate the relative merits of each and explain why a mixed strategy might be preferred over relying on a single source.[6 marks]
- 1.Offshore wind: advantages (renewable, clean) and disadvantages (intermittent, cost, maintenance).
- 2.Nuclear: advantages (reliable, low-carbon) and disadvantages (waste, cost, risk, long build time).
- 3.Natural gas: advantages (fast response, existing infrastructure) and disadvantages (CO2 emissions, non-renewable).
- 4.Explain how mixing the three resources addresses the weaknesses of each.
- 5.Conclude why diversity of supply is a sensible long-term strategy.