renewable vs. nonrenewable
global energy use
fossil fuels
nuclear power
renewable energy
100

Energy sources that can be replaced quickly.

Renewable

100

The most used energy sources worldwide.

Fossil fuels

100

The fossil fuel that releases the most CO₂.

Coal

100

Fuel used in nuclear reactors.

Uranium

100

Energy from the sun using panels.

Solar

200

Energy sources that cannot be replaced quickly.

Nonrenewable

200

Developing countries use a lot of this for energy.

Biomass

200

Liquid fossil fuel used for gasoline and diesel.

Petroleum (oil)

200

Process that splits atoms to release energy.

Fission

200

Largest renewable electricity source in the U.S.

Hydroelectric 

300

Main fuel used for cooking in many poor countries.

Biomass (wood)

300

As countries get richer, their energy use does this.

Increases

300

Extraction method that uses high pressure fluid.

Fracking

300

Big problem with nuclear waste.

It stays radioactive for a long time

300

Energy from moving air.

Wind

400

Coal, oil, and natural gas are examples of this.

Fossil fuels

400

The U.S. and other rich countries use mostly this type of energy.

Commercial energy (fossil fuels + electricity)

400

Burning coal and oil mainly causes this problem.

Air pollution

400

Main advantage of nuclear power.

No emissions 

400

Energy from heat inside the Earth.

Geothermal

500

Nuclear power is this type of resource.

Nonrenewable

500

Most of the world’s oil reserves are here.

Middle East

500

Main way fossil fuels make electricity.

Burn fuel → make steam → turn turbine → generate electricity

500

The famous nuclear accident in Ukraine.

Chernobyl

500

Energy made from organic waste or plants.

Biomass