Sustainable Development Guide

Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Sustainable-Development
Email:
First Name:



Main Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries sponsors


 

Latest Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries!



 

Welcome to Sustainable Development Guide

 

Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

The Affordable Wheel of Sustainable Development

from: The earth's core is about 4,000 miles down; it's hotter there than the surface of the sun. Geothermal energy is heat that comes from the earth's core; this form of energy is renewable, and thus goes the wheel of sustainable development. Since the late 90s to the present time we have heard a lot about the wheel of sustainable development; geothermal energy is sustainable because the amount of heat removed from the core of the earth is tiny compared to the amount that remains.

The earth is made up of an iron core, and then there is an outer core of molten ore called magma. The next layer, outward, is about 1,800 miles thick and is called the mantle; the outermost surface is 15 to 35 miles thick and is called the crust. The crust is broken up into plates, and this is where the volcanoes, furmaroles, geysers and hot springs are located. The Romans had a role in the wheel of sustainable development way before the term was ever thought of. They used geothermal energy to heat their buildings, to cook with, and to heat their pools; they also used water heated through geothermal energy for medicinal purposes.
The wheel of sustainable development keeps on turning as people all over the world produce electricity and heat their homes and businesses with geothermal energy. Deep wells are drilled just underground where there is heated groundwater. At the present time geothermal energy is much more affordable than conventional energy that comes from fossil fuel. Round and round goes the wheel of sustainable development as more people tap into geothermal energy.
The most geothermal reservoirs are found on the west coast of North and South America and the east coast of Asia and Australia; this area is known as the Ring of Fire. Geothermal energy can be found almost everywhere in the world, but in the United States—Alaska, California and Hawaii have the most geothermal wells. The wheel of sustainable development continues to turn in California as this state is generating the most electricity from this source. California's geysers and dry steam reservoir is the largest geothermal dry steam field in the world. Since 1960 to the present time, the wheel of sustainable development continues to turn as more people do their part to reduce the effects of global warming by switching from fossil fuel to geothermal energy.
In Iceland, the wheel of sustainable development continues to turn as 90 percent of the nation's heat and electricity comes from geothermal energy. The United States produces the most geothermal energy, but only 1 percent of electricity is generated for the entire nation; even so, California produces, with its 33 geothermal power plants, 90 percent of the nation's geothermal energy. Nevada helps to turn the wheel of sustainable development with its 15 geothermal power plants, and the states of Utah and Hawaii both have just one plant each.


Other Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries related Articles

Sustainable Economic Development
Sustainable Development Work
Wheel Of Sustainable Development
Technical Innovation Sustainable Development
Sustainable Development And Environment

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries Specific links

Sustainable Development In Industrialized Countries News

Is China a developing country? Key question unresolved in latest round of ... - Washington Post


Is China a developing country? Key question unresolved in latest round of ...
Washington Post
China wants to maintain a decades-old division between developed and developing countries, bearing in mind that, historically, the West has released most of the heat-trapping gases that scientists say could cause catastrophic changes in climate.

and more »

Read more...


Analysis: Political shift will make or break Rio+20 summit - Reuters


Boston.com

Analysis: Political shift will make or break Rio+20 summit
Reuters
... while the traditional "developed" nations like those of Europe, the United States and Japan struggle with slower growth. "The world in 1992 is not the same as in 2012. Each country will now have to bear responsibility for ensuring sustainability," ...
Political shift will make or break Rio+20 summitGMA News

all 285 news articles »

Read more...


Key question at climate talks: Is China poor? - The Daily Advertiser


Key question at climate talks: Is China poor?
The Daily Advertiser
China wants to maintain a decades-old division between developed and developing countries, bearing in mind that, historically, the West has released most of the heat-trapping gases that scientists say could cause catastrophic changes in climate.

Read more...


G8, Africa address food security - UPI.com


G8, Africa address food security
UPI.com
CAMP DAVID, Md., May 21 (UPI) -- An alliance between the African community and Group of Eight members could help aid sustainable development for millions of people, the group said. Delegates from the Group of Eight industrialized nations wrapped up ...

and more »

Read more...


G8 Detour On Food Security - AllAfrica.com


G8 Detour On Food Security
AllAfrica.com
Civil society groups, experts, and United Nations reports, by contrast, agree that the private agribusiness sector can play a constructive role, but only within the context of coherent development that empowers farmers themselves, rather than only ...

and more »

Read more...