List the principal Fossil Fuels (3)
Oil, Coal, and Gas
How is Oil and Natural Gas formed? (4)
When did we start to use fossil fuels? (1)
During the industrial revolution in the 1800s.
How many tonnes of coal is left and how long is it likely to last? (2)
1.1 trillion tonnes will last another 100+ years
What is Oil mainly used for? (3)
What is Natural Gas mainly used for? 9£0
What percentage did fossil fuels make up of the Global Energy Consumption in 2013? (1)
87%
What fossil fuel releases the least harmful emissions? (1)
Natural Gas
What fossil fuel releases the most harmful emissions? (1)
Coal
Why do we need to conserve fossil fuels? (2)
Because these fossil fuels are a non-renewable source of energy, and if we do not convert to renewable sources of energy, in 50 years nation wide black outs will become regular occurances and disrupt the world as we know it.
How many more years do we have until Oil and Gas run out? (1)
50 years
What are the two different groups that countries can fall into? (2)
-Annex (Developed nations)
Non-Annex (Developing nations)
Describe the Carbon Trading Concept. (4)
State three reasons in favor of Carbon Trading. (3)
-Environment
This system should result in cleaner air by reducing emissions because of the costs involved.
-Control
Should provide governments a form of control over their emissions emited by their industries.
-Finantial Incentive
If countried try hard to reduce their emissions they could gain Carbon Credits which they could sell on the open market to make money.
State four reasons against Carbon Trading. (4)
-Economy
Businesses could not get involved because they don’t want to incur costs that reduce their proffits.
-Complexity
Developed countries will have the infrastructure to produce low emissions, developing countries don’t.
-Measuring Emissions
Very difficult and potentially unreliable with large margins of error.
-Size of Credits
Limits abailable in a country may be too high to produce a significant decrease in Carbon Emissions.
State four uses of fossil fuels in modern day life. (4)
Power
Transport fuel
Plastics
Pharmaceutics
Define what a fossil fuel is. (2)
A fuel consisting of the remains of organisms preserved in rocks in the earth’s crust with high carbon and hydrogen content, such as coal.
Define what a renewable energy source is. (2)
A form of energy derived from natural sources that do not use up natural resources to harm the environment, such as wind.
State three different manufacturing processes that rely on fossil fuels for their raw materials. (3)
Plastics / pharmaceuticals / fibres.
Explain why global action on conservation of fossil fuels and climate change is needed. (3)
Conservation is triggered by a realisation that the worlds non-renewable resources are diminishing and that countries are using fossil fuels at a faster rate especially in emerging economies e.g. China, India {1}
Climate change has been linked to increasing use of fossil fuels. {1}
Global action is needed because the impact of excessive resource use affects the whole world. {1}
State 2 pieces of evidence presented by the global scientific community linking the combustion of fossil fuels with global warming and climate change. {2}
- Sea temperature rises.
-Ecology changes.
-Polar Ice caps melting.
-Rise in sea levels.
Describe three different pieces of scientific evidence that link the combustion of fossil fuels to global warming and climate change. {3}
State the main European, UK and NI government targets with regards to the continued use of fossil fuels as an energy source, as we approach 2020. {3}
Assess the validity of using nuclear energy as a viable alternative to both fossil fuels and renewable energy sources. {5}
Reference should be made to the relative energy densities of a fossil fuel {1}, renewable source {1} and nuclear source {1}.
Answers should provide details of how fossil fuels {1} and renewable sources {1} compare to nuclear energy.