Energy production: Difference between revisions

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<onlyinclude>Energy production refers to how much [[primary energy]] a country extracts from nature. This is the total of all of the harvested [[fuel]]s and [[flow]]s. It is important to note that production does '''not include''' any [[energy]] imported from another country, or exported to another country.</onlyinclude> The primary energy available for use by a country after imports and exports is the [[total primary energy supply]], often referred to as [[TPES]]. Please see Figure 1 for a flowchart that explains how production becomes TPES and eventually the [[total final consumption]] (referred to as [[TFC]]).
[[Category:Lecture 2B Energy around the world]]
[[category:371 topics]]
[[Category:Done 2021-01-31]]
[[Category: Translated to French]]
[[fr:Production d'énergie]]
<onlyinclude>Energy production refers to how much [[primary energy]] a country extracts from nature. This is the total of all of the harvested [[primary fuel]]s and [[primary energy flow]]s. Note production ignores both imports and exports, and sums up what's extracted from nature.</onlyinclude> The primary energy available for use by a country after imports and exports is the [[total primary energy supply]], often referred to as [[TPES]] and can be thought of as an [[energy mix]]. Please see Figure 1 for a flowchart that explains how production becomes TPES and eventually the [[total final consumption]] (referred to as [[TFC]]).
 
Energy production would include:
*Any [[coal]], [[oil]] or [[natural gas]] that is extracted from the ground in that country (but not the [[fossil fuel]]s that are imported.
*Any [[hydropower]], [[wind]], [[Geothermal energy|geothermal]], [[tidal power|tidal]] or [[solar power]] extracted from nature.
*Electricity from [[nuclear power plant]]s, rather than the energy held in [[uranium]] that's been mined because there's so much more energy in the uranium than any of the other sources. The accounting for nuclear power is done differently, so only the [[electricity]] is considered.


[[File:energyflows.png|800px|thumb|Figure 1. This diagram<ref>Created internally by a member of the Energy Education team.</ref> shows how production becomes [[TPES|Total Primary Energy Supply]] becomes [[TFC|Total Final Consumption]]. Various primary energy sources combine are changed with [[energy conversion technology|energy conversion technologies]] like [[power plant]]s and [[oil refinery|refineries]] to [[energy currency|energy currencies]].]]
[[File:energyflows.png|800px|thumb|Figure 1. This diagram<ref>Created internally by a member of the Energy Education team.</ref> shows how production becomes [[TPES|Total Primary Energy Supply]] becomes [[TFC|Total Final Consumption]]. Various primary energy sources combine are changed with [[energy conversion technology|energy conversion technologies]] like [[power plant]]s and [[oil refinery|refineries]] to [[energy currency|energy currencies]].]]
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In the data visualization below, click on different countries to see what the energy production looks like. The pie chart gives what fraction of the countries primary energy harvested from the environment is a particular source. Please note that for some countries production is bigger than [[TPES]] and for some countries production is smaller than [[TPES]] depending on how much energy is imported or exported.
In the data visualization below, click on different countries to see what the energy production looks like. The pie chart gives what fraction of the countries primary energy harvested from the environment is a particular source. Please note that for some countries production is bigger than [[TPES]] and for some countries production is smaller than [[TPES]] depending on how much energy is imported or exported.


<html><iframe id='world-energy' class='charts-iframe topic-Production'></iframe></html>  
<html><iframe id='world-energy' class='charts-iframe topic-Production' src="https://energyeducation.ca/simulations/OECD/map-pie-line.php?topic=Production" overflow='hidden'></iframe></html>
 
[[File:selected-logo.v4.jpg|right|200px|link=https://cleanet.org/clean/about/selected_by_CLEAN]]
==For Further Reading==
*[[Primary energy]] and [[TPES]]
*[[TFC]]
*[[Fuel vs flow]]
*[[Energy access]]
*Or explore a [[Special:Random|random page]]


[[Category:Jason write]]
==References==
[[Category:Lecture 2B Energy around the world]]
{{reflist}}
[[category:371 topics]]
[[Category:Uploaded]]

Latest revision as of 04:25, 27 December 2022

Energy production refers to how much primary energy a country extracts from nature. This is the total of all of the harvested primary fuels and primary energy flows. Note production ignores both imports and exports, and sums up what's extracted from nature. The primary energy available for use by a country after imports and exports is the total primary energy supply, often referred to as TPES and can be thought of as an energy mix. Please see Figure 1 for a flowchart that explains how production becomes TPES and eventually the total final consumption (referred to as TFC).

Energy production would include:

Figure 1. This diagram[1] shows how production becomes Total Primary Energy Supply becomes Total Final Consumption. Various primary energy sources combine are changed with energy conversion technologies like power plants and refineries to energy currencies.


In the data visualization below, click on different countries to see what the energy production looks like. The pie chart gives what fraction of the countries primary energy harvested from the environment is a particular source. Please note that for some countries production is bigger than TPES and for some countries production is smaller than TPES depending on how much energy is imported or exported.

Selected-logo.v4.jpg

For Further Reading

References

  1. Created internally by a member of the Energy Education team.