Fossil Fuel Facts Accessible
Fossil Fuel Facts Accessible
Oil
Oil is a sticky, black liquid made from tiny, one-celled sea plants and animals called plankton. To get to it,
you drill a narrow hole deep into the earth and pump it back to the surface using suction. Oil gets turned
into petrol / diesel to make your car go, tar for paving roads and chemicals that make plastics.
Coal
Coal is black, rocklike stuff that was created from dead plants in swamps. There is more of it than any other
fossil fuel. Coal can be found near the surface of the earth or further underground. To reach it, coal needs
to be mined. 40% of the electricity in the world is made from burning coal; its heat turns water into steam,
which turns turbines -- big wheels -- that make the electricity.
Natural Gas
Anywhere you find oil, you will find natural gas. Just like with oil, you drill to reach it and pump it into pipe
lines. Then it has to be cleaned, which means everything but the methane gas is removed. Methane
doesn’t have any smell, so a chemical is added to make it stink so you can tell when you’re around it. It’s
highly flammable and is used for cooking, heating and making electricity. It’s cleaner than oil or coal and
burns hotter as well, so it produces more electricity.
• Very large amounts of electricity can be generated in one place using coal, fairly cheaply.
• Transporting oil and gas to the power stations is easy
• Gas-fired power stations are very efficient.
• A fossil-fuelled power station can be built almost anywhere, as long as you can get large quantities
of fuel to it. Didcot power station, in Oxfordshire, has a dedicated rail link to supply the coal.
• Fossil fuels are non-renewable energy resources. Their supply is limited, and will eventually run
out. Fossil fuels do not renew themselves, while fuels such as wood can be renewed endlessly.
• Fossil fuels release carbon dioxide when they burn, which adds to the greenhouse effect and
increases global warming. Of the three fossil fuels, for a given amount of energy released, coal
produces the most carbon dioxide and natural gas produces the least.
• Coal and oil release sulphur dioxide gas when they burn, which causes breathing problems for
living creatures and contributes to acid rain.
• Mining coal can be difficult and dangerous. It can also destroy large areas of landscape.
• Coal-fired power stations need huge amounts of fuel, which means train-loads of coal almost
constantly. To cope with changing demands for power, the station needs reserves.
This means covering a large area of countryside next to the power station with piles of coal.