Miami Solar Homes will be the future in Miami with Solar Homes and Solar Panels and Solar Water heaters
Miami A Hot Spot
Miami, FL a sunbelt city should be well on their way to making the sun their prime energy source, but they are not, and like them many sunbelt cities are not even prepared to make the conversion from oil to solar energy, you would reckon they would have made many revolutionary moves in the management of solar energy conversion.
Success Solar Group is proud to initiate itself to the Miami, Florida area a premier energy company dedicated to educating people in the conversion of their homes from fossil fuel to solar energy, we have resources to gear, contractors, systems and conversion diplomacy.
Below is some more information on energy conversions…
The following is quoted from Eric McLamb
There is a fantastic deal of information and enthusiasm today about the development and increased manufacture of our global energy needs from alternative energy sources. Solar energy, wind power and moving water are all traditional sources of alternative energy that are making progress. The enthusiasm everyone shares for these developments has in many ways made a sense of complacency that our future energy demands will easily be met.
Alternative energy is an fascinating concept when you reckon about it. In our global society, it simply means energy that is produced from sources other than our primary energy supply: fossil fuels. Coal, oil and natural gas are the three kinds of fossil fuels that we have mostly depended on for our energy needs, from home heating and electricity to fuel for our automobiles and mass transportation.
The problem is, fossil fuels are non-renewable. They are limited in supply and will one day be depleted. There is no escaping this conclusion. Fossil fuels formed from plants and animals that lived hundreds of millions of years ago and became buried way underneath the Earth’s surface where their remains collectively transformed into the explosive equipment we use for fuel.
In fact, the earliest known fossil fuel deposits are from the Cambrian Period about 500 million years ago, way before the dinosaurs emerged onto the scene. This is when most of the major groups of animals first appeared on Earth. The later fossil fuels — which provide more poor fuels like peat or lignite coal (soft coal) — started forming as late as five million years ago in the Pliocene Period. At our rate of consumption, these fuels cannot occur quick enough to meet our contemporary or future energy demands.
Despite the promise of alternative energy sources — more appropriately called renewable energy, collectively they provide only about seven percent (7%) of the world’s energy needs (Source: Energy Information Outfit). This means that fossil fuels, along with nuclear energy — a controversial, non-renewable energy source — are supplying 93% of the world’s energy resources.
Nuclear energy, which is primarily generated by splitting atoms, only provides six percent (6%) of the world’s energy supplies. And it is not likely to be a major source of world energy consumption because of public pressure and the relative dangers associated with unleashing the power of the atom. Yet, governments such as the United States see its vast potential and are placing pressure on the further exploitation of nuclear energy.
The total world energy demand is for about 400 quadrillion British Thermal Units — or BTUs — each year (Source: US Department of Energy). That’s 400,000,000,000,000,000 BTUs! A BTU is roughly copy to the energy and heat generated by a match. Oil, coal and natural gas supply nearly 88 % of the world’s energy needs, or about 350 quadrillion BTUs. Of this amount, oil is king, providing about 41 percent of the world’s total energy supplies, or about 164 quadrillion BTUs. Coal provides 24% of the world’s energy, or 96 quadrillion BTUs, and natural gas provides the remaining 22%, or 88 quadrillion BTUs.
IIt’s not so much that we mine fossil fuels for our consumption any more than it is to mine salt or tap water supplies way underground. The problems occur when we ruin ecosystems while mining it and while using it. Certainly, if there were a way that fossil fuels can be mined and used in ways that do not harm our ecology, then every thing will be okay… in a perfect world. What makes our world perfect is that, it really isn’t perfect according to classification. It is natural, with all things interdependent on each other to live, grow and yield. Fossil fuel mining and oil manufacture can and has caused irreparable hurt to our environment.
The Fossil Fuel Dilemma
Fossil fuels exist, and they provide a valuable service. It’s not so much that we use fossil fuels for energy that is sticky, but it’s the side effects of using them that causes all of the problems. Burning fossil fuels makes carbon dioxide, the number one greenhouse gas contributing to global warming. Combustion of these fossil fuels is considered to be the largest contributing factor to the release of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. In the 20th century, the average temperature of Earth rose one degree Fahrenheit (1°F). This was a period that saw the most prolific population growth and manufacturing development (read use of energy) in Earth’s history.
The impact of global warming on the environment is wide and affects many areas. In the Frosty and Antarctica, warmer temperatures are causing the ice to melt which will increase sea level and change the composition of the surrounding sea water. Rising sea levels alone can impede processes ranging from settlement, agriculture and fishing both commercially and recreationally. Air pollution is also a direct result of the use of fossil fuels, ensuing in smog and the degradation of human shape and sow growth.
But there’s also the fantastic dangers posed to natural ecosystems that result from collecting fossil fuels, particularly coal and oil. Oil spills have devastated ecosystems and coal mining has stripped lands of their vitality. This is the primary reason there is giant pressure on the contemporary Bush Administration to discontinue its pursuit to tap the vast oil reserves in the Frosty National Flora and fauna Refuge (ANWR).
The oil, coal and natural gas companies know these are serious problems. But until our renewable energy sources become more viable as major energy providers, the only the alternative for our global population is for these companies to continue tapping into the fossil fuel reserves to meet our energy needs. And, you can pretty much count on these companies being there providing energy from renewable sources when the fossil fuels are depleted. Many oil companies, for example, are involved in the development of more reliable renewable energy technologies. For example, British Petroleum Company, today known as BP, has become one of the world’s chief providers of solar energy through its BP Solar division, a business that they are plotting on eclipsing their oil manufacture business in the near future.
Future Supplies for Future Energy
Just how limited are our fossil fuel reserves? Some estimates say our fossil fuel reserves will be depleted within 50 years, while others say it will be 100-120 years. The fact is that neither one of these projections is very appealing for a global community that is so heavily dependent on fossil fuels to meet basic human needs. The bottom line: We are going to run out of fossil fuels for energy and we have no choice but to arrange for the new age of energy manufacture since, most certainly, human demands for energy will not decrease.
Nobody really knows when the last drop of oil, lump of coal or cubic foot of natural gas will be collected from the Earth. All of it will depend on how well we mange our energy demands along with how well we can develop and use renewable energy sources.
And here is one very vital factor: population growth. As the population grows upwards towards nine billion people over the next 50 years, the world’s energy demands will increase proportionately. Not only will it be vital for renewable energy to keep up with the increasing population growth, but it must outpace not only these demands but start replacing fossil fuel energy manufacture if we are to meet future energy needs.
By the year 2020, world energy consumption is projected to increase by 50%, or an additional 207 quadrillion BTUs. If the global consumption of renewable energy sources remains constant, the world’s unfilled fossil fuel reserves will be consumed in 104 years or ahead of schedule in the 22nd century.(Source: US Department of Energy) Clearly, renewable energy resources will play an increasingly vital role in the power generation mix over the next century.
Miami Solar, Miami Solar Panels, Miami Solar Water, Miami Solar Money.
http://www.SuccessSolarGroup.org
Johnny Solar
Born in Chicago, IL
Solar solution developer
Energy Corporation Association
Affiliated Green Earth Handbook
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