Coalbed Methane — Composition and Formation

Coalbed methane is produced within a process of oil and petroleum system. A petroleum system usually consists of oil in a sedimentary basin with a hydrocarbon source rock and all related oil and gas sources. Conventional petroleum system comprises of a hydrocarbon-generating source rock slate, with the help of heating and constant burial, resulted gas an oil. Coalbed methane is not same with coal which is originating from coal reservoir. The coal is a hydrocarbon source rock that developed during burial heating into a substance similar in structure to activated carbon. This is an organic substance that is chemically covered or heat-treated to increase micro-pores with a matching increase in the surface to increase gas sorption capacity. Coal produce methane gas and it has the capacity keep gas in place. (more…)

Nuclear Fission and the Greenhouse Effect

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Within the coming years, fossil fuel will be failed back its main role as the ultimate main energy sources. Fossil fuels has known to have emit carbon energy and caused unrecoverable damages to environment in the long run. Low or zero carbon energy is gain popularity and nuclear power is known inline with this new movement in reducing the greenhouse effects. Nuclear power consisted of nuclear fusion and nuclear fission. Below we are explaining more detail about nuclear fission. (more…)

Interactions Between World Economic Growth and World Natural Resources


Statistics on national production levels and indicators of environmental pressure have been collected during the past few decades (and reconstructed for the more distant past) to document the link between world economic growth and the environment. The theory of world economic growth and economic theories of world natural resources provide explanations and interpretations of the trends as well as methods to assess future developments. The basic approach in most statistical and theoretical analyses is the decomposition of aggregate production function of a nation into, on the one hand, the current state of technology and, on the other hand, the inputs into the national production process. The main inputs are labor (hours worked), capital (produced means of production that can be used over a certain time period), and world natural resources. (more…)

Geothermal Energy - Its Types and How It Works

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Geothermal energy is energy created by the heat of the Earth. Under the Earth’s crust lies a layer of thick, hot rock with occasional pockets of water. This water sometimes seeps up to the surface in the form of hot springs. Even where the water does not travel naturally to the Earth’s surface, it is sometimes possible to reach it by drilling. This hot water can be used as a virtually free source of renewable energy, either directly as hot water, steam, or heat or as a means of generating power. Geothermal energy as renewable energy is nonpolluting, inexpensive, and in most cases the sources is renewable. (more…)

Renewable Energy Sources from Economic and Environmental Perspectives

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Renewable energy sources cannot run out and causes so little damage to the environment that its use does not need to be restricted. No energy system based on mineral resources is renewable because, one day, the mineral deposits will be used up. This is true for fossil fuels and uranium. The debate about when a particular mineral resource will run out is irrelevant in this context. Renewable energy sources are replenished continuously.

Renewable energy sources—solar, wind, biomass (under specific conditions), and tides—are based directly or indirectly on solar energy. Hydroelectric power is not necessarily a renewable energy source because large-scale projects can cause ecological damage and irreversible consequences. Geothermal energy heat is renewable but must be used cautiously to guard against irreversible ecological effects. (more…)