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Topic 7.2ESS SL60 flashcards

Energy sources—uses and management

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Card 1 of 607.2.1
Question

Define fossil fuels.

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All Flashcards in Topic 7.2

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7.2.115 cards

Card 1example
Question

Define fossil fuels.

Answer

Fossil fuels are non-renewable energy sources formed from ancient organic matter over millions of years, including coal, oil, and natural gas.

💡 Hint

Ancient biomass → energy

Card 2example
Question

Why are fossil fuels considered unsustainable?

Answer

They are finite (non-renewable on human timescales) and cause major environmental impacts, especially climate change and air pollution.

💡 Hint

Finite + impacts

Card 3example
Question

State two extraction impacts of fossil fuels.

Answer

Extraction can cause habitat destruction (mines, drilling sites, pipelines) and water pollution (oil spills, fracking contamination, acid mine drainage).

💡 Hint

Extraction harms before burning

Card 4example
Question

What is the biggest global environmental impact of burning fossil fuels?

Answer

Greenhouse gas emissions (mainly CO2) driving climate change.

💡 Hint

CO2 → warming

Card 5example
Question

Name the three main fossil fuels.

Answer

Coal, oil (petroleum), and natural gas.

💡 Hint

Coal–oil–gas

Card 6example
Question

Which fossil fuel is most associated with transport, and why?

Answer

Oil is most associated with transport because it is refined into petrol, diesel, and jet fuel and is highly energy-dense and portable.

💡 Hint

Oil → fuels

Card 7example
Question

Name two major air pollutants from fossil fuel combustion (besides CO2).

Answer

Sulfur dioxide (SO2) which causes acid rain, and nitrogen oxides (NOx) which contribute to smog; particulates are also important.

💡 Hint

SO2 + NOx

Card 8example
Question

Which fossil fuel is generally the most polluting and why?

Answer

Coal is generally most polluting because it has high carbon content and produces more CO2 and air pollutants (SO2, particulates, mercury) per unit of energy.

💡 Hint

Coal = dirtiest

Card 9example
Question

State two combustion impacts from fossil fuels.

Answer

Combustion releases CO2 (climate change) and air pollutants such as SO2/NOx/particulates (acid rain, smog, respiratory disease).

💡 Hint

CO2 + air pollution

Card 10example
Question

Why is natural gas sometimes called the “cleanest” fossil fuel?

Answer

It produces less CO2 and far fewer SO2/particulates than coal when burned, though methane leakage during extraction can reduce its climate advantage.

💡 Hint

Lower CO2 but leaks matter

Card 11example
Question

What does “peak oil” refer to?

Answer

Peak oil is the point when global oil production reaches its maximum and then begins to decline as reserves become harder to extract.

💡 Hint

Max production then decline

Card 12example
Question

Why can methane leakage undermine the climate benefit of natural gas?

Answer

Methane is a potent greenhouse gas; leaks during extraction and transport can offset the lower CO2 emissions from burning gas compared to coal.

💡 Hint

CH4 potency

Card 13example
Question

What’s a good method for comparing energy sources in exams?

Answer

Use consistent criteria such as GHG emissions, air pollution, water use, land use, reliability, cost, and impacts across the life cycle.

💡 Hint

Same criteria each time

Card 14example
Question

What does “energy return on investment (EROI)” mean for fossil fuels?

Answer

EROI is energy output divided by energy input. As easy reserves are depleted, EROI tends to decline (more effort/energy needed per unit gained).

💡 Hint

Output ÷ input

Card 15example
Question

State one exam question type common for non-renewables.

Answer

Common questions include comparing fossil fuels by impacts, explaining why fossil fuel use is unsustainable, and describing trends in energy consumption from data.

💡 Hint

Compare + trends

7.2.215 cards

Card 16example
Question

Define renewable energy and give two examples from Unit 7.

Answer

Renewable energy is energy from sources that are naturally replenished on human timescales. Examples include solar power and wind power.

💡 Hint

Definition + 2 examples.

Card 17example
Question

Explain how hydroelectric power generates electricity.

Answer

Hydroelectric power uses flowing or falling water to spin turbines, converting kinetic energy into electrical energy, usually in a dam or run-of-river system.

💡 Hint

Water flow → turbine → electricity.

Card 18example
Question

Classify solar and wind as intermittent or baseload sources.

Answer

Solar and wind are intermittent sources because their output varies with sunlight and wind speed.

💡 Hint

Intermittent = variable output.

Card 19example
Question

What is the key difference between photovoltaic (PV) solar and concentrated solar power (CSP)?

Answer

PV converts sunlight directly into electricity using semiconductors, while CSP uses mirrors to concentrate sunlight to heat a fluid and generate electricity via turbines.

💡 Hint

PV = direct electricity, CSP = heat then turbine.

Card 20example
Question

Name three renewable energy sources and one key limitation for each.

Answer

Solar: intermittent; Wind: intermittent; Hydro: ecosystem disruption and site limits; Geothermal: location-limited; Biomass: sustainability and air pollution concerns (any three with a correct limitation).

💡 Hint

Source + limitation pairing.

Card 21example
Question

Give one environmental disadvantage of large hydroelectric dams.

Answer

Large dams can flood habitats, block fish migration, and displace communities; reservoirs can also produce methane from decomposing organic matter.

💡 Hint

Think habitat + migration + displacement.

Card 22example
Question

Which renewables are commonly considered baseload (more reliable) in the summary?

Answer

Hydro (with reservoirs), geothermal, and biomass are commonly considered more reliable/baseload compared with solar and wind.

💡 Hint

Baseload trio: hydro, geothermal, biomass.

Card 23example
Question

Why is geothermal energy considered a reliable (baseload) source in suitable locations?

Answer

Because heat from Earth’s interior is continuously available, allowing steady electricity generation or direct heating independent of daily weather conditions.

💡 Hint

Continuous heat supply.

Card 24example
Question

State one advantage and one disadvantage of solar power.

Answer

Advantage: no greenhouse gas emissions during operation and widely available. Disadvantage: intermittent supply (no sun at night) so storage or backup is needed.

💡 Hint

1 pro + 1 con.

Card 25example
Question

State one advantage and one disadvantage of wind power.

Answer

Advantage: low emissions during operation and relatively cheap. Disadvantage: intermittent output and potential impacts such as visual/noise concerns or bird/bat mortality.

💡 Hint

1 pro + 1 con.

Card 26example
Question

Give one reason hydro power can be controversial despite being renewable.

Answer

Large hydro can flood habitats, disrupt river ecosystems, block fish migration, and displace communities, so its environmental and social costs can be high.

💡 Hint

Renewable but high local impacts.

Card 27example
Question

State one limitation of geothermal power.

Answer

Geothermal power is location-limited to regions with accessible heat (often near tectonic boundaries) and can have issues such as gas release (e.g., H2S) or induced seismicity.

💡 Hint

Location-limited is key.

Card 28example
Question

What is a common exam-style way to evaluate energy sources?

Answer

Compare energy sources using consistent criteria such as greenhouse gas emissions, reliability, cost, land use, water use, and impacts on biodiversity.

💡 Hint

Use consistent criteria.

Card 29example
Question

Why is biomass not automatically carbon-neutral?

Answer

Biomass is only carbon-neutral if new plant growth absorbs as much CO2 as is released when the biomass is burned; if biomass causes deforestation or regrowth is slow, net emissions can be high.

💡 Hint

Neutral only with regrowth balance.

Card 30example
Question

Why do solar and wind often require energy storage or backup power?

Answer

Because solar and wind are intermittent: solar output depends on sunlight and wind output depends on wind speed, so supply does not always match demand without storage or backup generation.

💡 Hint

Intermittency → mismatch with demand.

7.2.315 cards

Card 31example
Question

Define nuclear fission.

Answer

Nuclear fission is the splitting of a heavy atomic nucleus (such as uranium-235) into smaller nuclei, releasing energy and additional neutrons.

💡 Hint

Split heavy nucleus → energy.

Card 32example
Question

State two advantages of nuclear power.

Answer

Advantages include low greenhouse gas emissions during operation and reliable baseload electricity generation (high capacity factor).

💡 Hint

Low carbon + reliable baseload.

Card 33example
Question

What is the main fuel commonly used in current nuclear fission reactors?

Answer

Most current fission reactors use enriched uranium, especially uranium-235 (or fuel that produces plutonium-239 in some designs).

💡 Hint

Think uranium-235.

Card 34example
Question

Give one reason nuclear is described as “baseload”.

Answer

It can run continuously at high output regardless of weather, providing a steady electricity supply.

💡 Hint

Continuous output.

Card 35example
Question

Outline how a nuclear power plant produces electricity from fission.

Answer

Fission releases heat, which boils water into steam; the steam turns turbines connected to generators, producing electricity. Control rods and moderators help control the chain reaction.

💡 Hint

Heat → steam → turbine → electricity.

Card 36example
Question

State two disadvantages of nuclear power.

Answer

Disadvantages include long-lived radioactive waste and the risk of severe accidents; high construction and decommissioning costs are also major issues.

💡 Hint

Waste + safety are core.

Card 37example
Question

List two major concerns that make nuclear controversial.

Answer

Key concerns include radioactive waste management and the risk of severe accidents; high costs and proliferation risk are also common concerns.

💡 Hint

Waste + accidents.

Card 38example
Question

Why can nuclear power be attractive for climate mitigation?

Answer

Because it generates electricity with very low direct greenhouse gas emissions during operation, helping reduce CO2 from fossil-fuel electricity.

💡 Hint

Low operating CO2.

Card 39example
Question

What is a chain reaction in nuclear fission?

Answer

A chain reaction occurs when neutrons released by one fission event trigger further fission in other nuclei, sustaining energy release; in reactors it is kept controlled.

💡 Hint

Neutrons trigger more fission.

Card 40example
Question

Why is nuclear energy described as high energy density?

Answer

A small mass of nuclear fuel releases a very large amount of energy compared with fossil fuels, so little fuel produces lots of electricity.

💡 Hint

Small fuel mass → huge energy.

Card 41example
Question

What is meant by “proliferation risk” in nuclear energy debates?

Answer

Proliferation risk is the possibility that nuclear technology, materials, or expertise could be diverted to develop nuclear weapons.

💡 Hint

Weapons risk.

Card 42example
Question

Why is nuclear often compared to renewables in sustainability essays?

Answer

Because nuclear is low-carbon like renewables but differs due to finite fuel and radioactive waste, so evaluating trade-offs is a common exam theme.

💡 Hint

Low carbon, different risks.

Card 43example
Question

Why is nuclear waste considered a long-term issue?

Answer

High-level radioactive waste can remain hazardous for thousands of years, requiring secure storage and management over very long time periods.

💡 Hint

Very long half-lives.

Card 44example
Question

Which EVS perspective is more likely to support nuclear, and why?

Answer

Technocentric perspectives are more likely to support nuclear because they emphasise technological solutions and value reliable low-carbon power.

💡 Hint

Technocentric = tech solutions.

Card 45example
Question

Name one reason nuclear is often classed as low-carbon but non-renewable.

Answer

It is low-carbon because it produces no direct CO2 during operation, but it is non-renewable because uranium is finite and can be depleted.

💡 Hint

Low carbon ≠ renewable.

7.2.415 cards

Card 46example
Question

How do technocentric and ecocentric EVSs differ in energy preferences?

Answer

Technocentric EVSs often support large-scale technology solutions such as nuclear power and CCS, while ecocentric EVSs emphasise demand reduction, efficiency, and small-scale distributed renewables.

💡 Hint

Tech fixes vs lifestyle/system change.

Card 47example
Question

Give five common criteria used to evaluate energy sources in ESS.

Answer

Common criteria include greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution, water use, land use, reliability (capacity factor), cost, scalability, and EROI (any five).

💡 Hint

Think emissions, reliability, cost, land/water, EROI.

Card 48example
Question

Name four evaluation criteria you can use in a 9-mark energy essay.

Answer

You can evaluate energy sources using criteria such as emissions, pollution, reliability, cost, land use, water use, EROI, feasibility, and scalability (any four).

💡 Hint

Pick 4 and apply consistently.

Card 49example
Question

State two major technical challenges of the energy transition.

Answer

Challenges include intermittency of solar/wind requiring storage, and the need to upgrade grid infrastructure to manage variable supply and new demand patterns.

💡 Hint

Intermittency + grids.

Card 50example
Question

What does EROI mean?

Answer

EROI (energy return on investment) is the ratio of energy output to energy input for an energy source. Higher EROI generally indicates a more efficient source.

💡 Hint

Output ÷ input.

Card 51example
Question

Why is there “no perfect” energy source in sustainability discussions?

Answer

Because all energy sources involve trade-offs across environmental, economic, and social criteria, so choices require balancing competing priorities.

💡 Hint

Trade-offs always exist.

Card 52example
Question

Give one technocentric and one ecocentric energy preference.

Answer

Technocentric: nuclear power or CCS. Ecocentric: demand reduction/efficiency and small-scale renewables.

💡 Hint

One from each worldview.

Card 53example
Question

Why is lifecycle analysis important when comparing energy sources?

Answer

Because impacts occur across extraction, construction, operation, and decommissioning. Lifecycle analysis compares total emissions and impacts, not just operation.

💡 Hint

Not just “during use”.

Card 54example
Question

What are “stranded assets” in the context of the energy transition?

Answer

Stranded assets are fossil-fuel infrastructure or reserves that lose economic value as policies and markets shift toward low-carbon energy.

💡 Hint

Old fossil investments lose value.

Card 55example
Question

Give one reason fossil fuels score well on some criteria but poorly on others.

Answer

They are reliable, scalable, and often cheap, but they perform poorly on greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution and are non-renewable.

💡 Hint

Reliable but high emissions.

Card 56example
Question

Give two policy tools governments can use to accelerate the energy transition.

Answer

Examples include carbon pricing (tax or cap-and-trade), renewable energy targets/subsidies, fossil fuel subsidy reform, and investment in R&D (any two).

💡 Hint

Think price signals + targets.

Card 57example
Question

List two barriers that slow replacing fossil fuels with renewables.

Answer

Barriers include intermittency and storage needs, grid upgrades, high upfront costs, political resistance, and infrastructure lock-in (any two).

💡 Hint

Barriers: storage, grid, politics, lock-in.

Card 58example
Question

Why is the energy transition described as political and social, not just technical?

Answer

Because vested interests, infrastructure lock-in, costs, public acceptance, and lifestyle expectations influence how quickly and fairly energy systems can change.

💡 Hint

People + power + politics.

Card 59example
Question

Why can land use be a controversial criterion for renewables?

Answer

Some renewables (especially large solar or wind farms) require large areas or specific sites, which can compete with other land uses and impact habitats, even if emissions are low.

💡 Hint

Low carbon ≠ no footprint.

Card 60example
Question

What is a strong essay structure for evaluating energy choices?

Answer

Define sustainability and criteria, compare multiple sources using the same criteria, link preferences to EVSs, then conclude with a balanced justified energy mix.

💡 Hint

Define → compare → EVS → conclude.

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