Routledge, 2015, 176 Pages, ISBN-10: 0415858615<div class="bb-sep"></div>Renewable Energy normally refers to usable energy sources that are an alternative to fuel sources, but without the negatively evaluated consequences of the replaced fuels. Although energy issues have a long tradition in sociolo
Renewable Energies
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Content:
Chapter 1 Photovoltaic Electricity Production (pages 1β23): Jean?Claude Muller
Chapter 2 Photovoltaic Systems Connected to the Grid (pages 25β43): Seddik Bacha and Daniel Chatroux
Chapter 3 Solar Heating (pages 45β62): Christophe Marvillet
Chapter 4 Solar Thermodynamic Power Stations (pages 63β102): Alain Ferriere
Chapter 5 Wind Systems Technology (pages 103β142): Regine Belhomme, Daniel Roye and Nicolas Laverdure
Chapter 6 Integration of Wind Turbine Generators into the Grid (pages 143β180): Regine Belhomme, Daniel Roye and Nicolas Laverdure
Chapter 7 Marine Energy Resources Conversion Systems (pages 181β226): Bernard Multon, Alain Clement, Marie Ruellan, Julien Seigneurbieux and Hamid Ben Ahmed
Chapter 8 Small Hydropower (pages 227β260): Raymond Chenal, Aline Choulot, Vincent Denis and Norbert Tissot
Chapter 9 Geothermal Energy Production (pages 261β328): Florence Jaudin and Laurent Le Bel
Chapter 10 Biofuels (pages 329β395): Frederic Monot, Jean?Luc Duplan, Nathalie Alazard?Toux and Stephane His
Chapter 11 Biogas (pages 397β425): Pierre Labeyrie
Chapter 12 Energy Production from Wood (pages 427β471): Frederic Douard
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<STRONG>Renewable Energies Offshore includes</STRONG> the papers presented in the 1st International Conference on Renewable Energies Offshore (RENEW2014), held in Lisbon, 24-26 November 2014.Β The conference is a consequence of the importance of the offshore renewable energies worldwide and an oppor
<b>Renewable Energy , first published by Academic Press in 1979, is considered the foundation text for renewable energy studies worldwide. The first edition addressed graduate students and researchers in an attempt to put renewable energy on the map, academically speaking. In 1979 there were no
Renewable Energy is energy generated from natural resourcesβ-βsuch as sunlight, wind, rain, tides and geothermal heatβ-βwhich are naturally replenished. In 2008, about 18% of global final energy consumption came from renewables, with 13% coming from traditional biomass, such as wood burning. Hydroel