Geothermal energy is taking Earth’s internal heat and converting it to energy, whether it is from hot water or molten rock. Converting to geothermal energy is a way of using renewable resources that are sustainable. Some countries have already started using this type of energy including the Phillipines, Coasta Rica, and Salvador. Even “Iceland is using it’s geothermal energy source to meet all of it’s energy needs” (Morgan 54). This energy source is much more efficient than using fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are nonrenewable and contributes to climate change. When they burn, they relase carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. This not only weakens the atmosphere but the “excess carbon in the ocean makes the water more acidic, putting marine life in danger” (Przyborski). Unlike fossil fuels, geothermal energy sources are renweable and are completly natural. To transfer Earth’s heat into energy, it goes through a geothermal heat pump system that is similar to solar thermal power (Koontz). “An air delivery system using ducts, along with a heat exchanger buried in the ground, can pump heat into a building by removing the heat from the exchanger and circulating it inside” (Koontz). Geothermal pipes can also go underneath roads and sidewalks to save space and melt snow or ice. With the majority of countries using geothermal energy, the rate at which the climate is changing will
Geothermal energy is taking Earth’s internal heat and converting it to energy, whether it is from hot water or molten rock. Converting to geothermal energy is a way of using renewable resources that are sustainable. Some countries have already started using this type of energy including the Phillipines, Coasta Rica, and Salvador. Even “Iceland is using it’s geothermal energy source to meet all of it’s energy needs” (Morgan 54). This energy source is much more efficient than using fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are nonrenewable and contributes to climate change. When they burn, they relase carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. This not only weakens the atmosphere but the “excess carbon in the ocean makes the water more acidic, putting marine life in danger” (Przyborski). Unlike fossil fuels, geothermal energy sources are renweable and are completly natural. To transfer Earth’s heat into energy, it goes through a geothermal heat pump system that is similar to solar thermal power (Koontz). “An air delivery system using ducts, along with a heat exchanger buried in the ground, can pump heat into a building by removing the heat from the exchanger and circulating it inside” (Koontz). Geothermal pipes can also go underneath roads and sidewalks to save space and melt snow or ice. With the majority of countries using geothermal energy, the rate at which the climate is changing will