Contributor: Lindsey Congalosi. Lesson ID: 13295
Do you like electricity? What about heat? We power our lives with energy, but where does it come from? Will it ever run out? Learn all about renewable and nonrenewable energy sources!
The image above shows several types of power plants or places where energy is created.
Dive into this lesson and learn all about renewable and nonrenewable energy sources!
Renewable energy sources can be replenished during our lifetime. They can be created over a relatively short period, meaning there is always a way to produce more energy from this source.
Nonrenewable energy sources cannot be quickly or easily replenished. Nonrenewable energy sources take a long time to form, and once they have been used, they are gone forever or at least the next few million years, according to scientific consensus.
(Scientific theories on the timeline of the earth and its processes differ. Check out our lesson under Additional Resoruces in the right-hand sidebar to explore further.)
Separate the energy sources below by dragging them into the appropriate categories.
If you're confused, watch the video below.
First, explore nonrenewable energy sources.
Nonrenewable resources are finite, eventually running out. Fossil fuels take millions of years to form, so new fossil fuels can't be created when we run out because it would take too much time. Nuclear energy requires uranium, which is also a nonrenewable resource.
Look into fossil fuels first. Use the arrow keys to click through all of the slides below.
Renewable energy sources are infinite sources of energy. These energy sources are cleaner than fossil fuels, but each comes with its pros and cons.
Learn a little more about each type.
It is important to find more forms of renewable energy because most humans currently use nonrenewable energy sources to power everyday items, such as automobiles.
Continue to the Got It? section to see if you can tell the difference between renewable and nonrenewable energy sources!