Future overview of wind power and renewable energy: Demand for energy is increasing year by year with technological development around the world. But the best way to generate energy is not polluting the air or consuming fossil fuels. Renewable energy is also the best solution to this problem. Among the available renewable energy sources, wind energy has great expectations. Wind turbines have been used for generations and their technology is constantly evolving. Wind energy provides a viable alternative to traditional fossil fuels.
For over a decade, wind energy is the fastest growing renewable energy source in the world. According to Sasha Jacob's reinvestment in clean energy, wind power can supply enough electricity to generate more than 5% of Canadian households. This will supply approximately 6% of Canadian electricity demand. In addition, wind turbines, improved engineering design and proper retreat from the home helps alleviate noise problems. The amount of air is sufficient, it will not run out of the world's natural resources. It brings tremendous benefits to society and reduces costs associated with wind pollution as it comes from clean energy. Because of low operation cost and short construction time, clean energy is low cost, it is faster and convenient than conventional power plant.
Renewable energy such as solar, wind, waves, biomass, geothermal, etc. is based on renewable energy. Renewable resources such as water (hydropower, tidal power, wave force), geothermal (for geothermal energy), solar (for solar energy) etc are virtually infinite, unlike counterparts which can not be renewed, exhausted You can not. If you do not use it carefully, things may run out. The potential wave energy on the coastline can supply one-fifth of world demand. Hydropower can meet one-third of the world's total energy demand. Geothermal energy can supply 1.5 times the energy we need. If there is enough wind to supply 30 times the power to the Earth, wind energy can satisfy all human needs. Solar energy currently supplies only 0.1% of our global energy demand, but enough to meet the needs of human beings 4,000 times and forecast energy demand worldwide by 2050.