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Hydro-Energy--
What is it?
Flowing
water creates energy that can be captured and turned into electricity.
This is called hydropower. Hydropower is currently the largest source
of renewable power, generating only about 10% of the electricity
used in the United States.
The
most common type of hydropower plant uses a dam on a river to store
water in a reservoir. Water released from the reservoir flows through
a turbine, spinning it, which, in turn, activates a generator to
produce electricity. But hydropower doesn't necessarily require
a large dam. Some hydropower plants just use a small canal to channel
the river water through a turbine.
Another
type of hydropower plant—called a pumped storage plant—can
even store power. The power is sent from a power grid into the electric
generators. The generators then spin the turbines backward, which
causes the turbines to pump water from a river or lower reservoir
to an upper reservoir, where the power is stored. To use the power,
the water is released from the upper reservoir back down into the
river or lower reservoir. This spins the turbines forward, activating
the generators to produce electricity.
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