The document discusses the future of energy in Bangladesh. It outlines various renewable and non-renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, geothermal, hydropower, biomass, municipal solid waste, coal, crude oil, and natural gas. For renewable sources, it provides brief descriptions of how each works. It also notes that scientists in Bangladesh have identified reserves of heavy minerals in sea sands. The document is authored by Shamil Arfan Tuhin and is intended to outline energy topics for Bangladesh.
3. Renewable
Energy
Renewable energy is produced
using natural resources that are
constantly replaced and never
run out.
Solar
Wind
Geothermal
Hydropower
Biomass
Municipal solid waste
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
4. Solar Energy
Solar energy is energy created by the
heat and light of the sun. Solar
power is produced when this energy
is converted into electricity or used
to heat air, water, or other
substances.
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
5. Wind Energy
Wind power is generated
by converting the kinetic
energy of the atmosphere
into useable electricity
with wind turbines.
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
6. Geothermal Energy
Geothermal energy is stored
as heat in the earth.
The heat is generated by the
natural decay over millions of
years of radiogenic elements
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
9. Biomass
Biomass is fuel that is
developed from organic
materials, a renewable
and sustainable source of
energy used to create
electricity or other forms
of power.
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
10. Municipal Solid Waste
Municipal solid waste (MSW), commonly known as trash or garbage, is
a waste type consisting of everyday items that are discarded by the public.
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
11. Non-renewable energy comes from
sources that can't be replenished in a
short period of time
Non-renewable
Energy
Coal
Crude oil
Natural Gas
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
12. Coal
Coal is a fossil fuel and is the altered
remains of prehistoric vegetation
that originally accumulated in
swamps and peat bogs. The energy
we get from coal today comes from
the energy that plants absorbed
from the sun millions of years ago
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
13. Crude Oil
Crude oil, commonly known as
petroleum, is a liquid found within
the Earth comprised of hydrocarbons,
organic compounds and small
amounts of metal
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
14. Natural Gas
Natural gas is a combustible, gaseous
mixture of simple hydrocarbon
compounds, usually found in deep
underground reservoirs formed by
porous rock.
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
15. Heavy Minerals
Bangladeshi scientists have found eight
potential heavy economic minerals in sands of
the sea beach in the country and their reserve
is estimated 1.76 million tons.
MonaziteGarnetKyanite
Magnetite Leucoxene
RutileZirconIlmenite
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
16. Present scenario of Energy
in
Bangladesh
- Shamil Arfan Tuhin β Future of Energy in Bangladesh
19. Without Energy,
World is just nothing
Shamil Arfan Tuhin
Student of Jessore University of
Science & Technology
Dept. of Petroleum & Mining
Engineering