ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

History of Technology 1: Solar and Wind Energy 37 Views


Share It!


Description:

Solar and wind energy are both great ideas...until the weather decides to go rogue and overthrow our entire government. ...It could happen. Sleep with one eye open.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

In our search for renewable energy we decided to go to the

00:07

very top, the Big Kahuna... the Sun. Seems like a great idea right well after all [Footage of Earth is zoomed out until the entire planet is seen next to the Sun]

00:13

that's where the plant turns for their energy. Oh there was just one small issue...

00:17

We are not plants, we can't just stand around the sunlight and end up

00:22

with a full stomach. To harvest the sun's energy we needed to invent something new

00:26

called the photovoltaic cell. The first working photovoltaic cell was built in [Solar cell with a halo]

00:33

1954 in the same research lab where the first transistor was

00:38

assembled. Turns out that putting strips of almost pure silicon, semiconducting

00:44

material, in the sunlight generates an electric charge. Even after the

00:49

scientists realized this it took decades before practical marketable solar panels [Solar panel at a party with a bow tie on]

00:54

showed up, and they were still super expensive. Most people weren't interested

00:59

in costly bulky panels when they could just plug into the electric grid. Then in

01:03

the mid-1970s we hit our first oil crisis, several Middle Eastern nations

01:08

stop selling us oil, which the US took about as well as somebody having stolen

01:13

a puppy. Prices skyrocketed people panicked and alternative energy sources suddenly

01:19

looked a lot more interesting. Well by the 1990s solar panels were cheaper and [Man scans a solar panel through a checkout]

01:24

more common it basically became the modern panels we know and love today.

01:28

And nowadays we have a direct line to the sun's energy, take that trees,

01:32

brussel sprouts and moss. (Laughing) Oh what? They were always rubbing it in our faces.

01:37

Well but we didn't stop with the Sun we're also like "hey how about the wind

01:42

that used to work pretty well way back when." Anyhow we totally figured out

01:46

wind power couple a thousand years ago. As soon as we knew how to generate [Prehistoric man holding a paper pinwheel]

01:50

electricity we hooked up windmills to generators and may wind turbines didn't

01:55

happen in some high-tech research lab either. First guy to make electricity

01:59

with wind was a Scottish professor named James Blyth and he built it literally

02:04

in his backyard in 1891 whoa. All the neighbors probably thought he was crazy.

02:10

Unlike solar power wind generated electricity was a relatively standard

02:14

option throughout the 20th century. We're not saying that we were dewy-eyed

02:18

environmentalists in their 30s who loved wind power because it was kinda nice to [Two people hugging wind turbines]

02:22

mother earth... Nope, wind power was just a practical and useful way to generate

02:27

power in certain circumstances. Like in rural areas too far from the power grid

02:32

such as the American great plains until the forties and fifties. Or on sailing

02:36

ships before they all converted to steam or internal combustion. Or on early [Sailors on a ship with waves crashing onto them]

02:41

expeditions to Antarctica where explorers would have plugged into a

02:45

Penguin if they thought it would fire up their electric blanket. But wind turbines

02:49

were pretty cheap and reliably produced a little bit of electricity so why not

02:53

use 'em. Well the same oil crisis that gave the solar industry a boost [Barrel of oil and wind turbine fist bump]

02:57

encouraged wind power research too. Private companies and government

03:01

programs began investigating wind turbines that were bigger, more efficient

03:05

and could be used for public utility electricity. You know it wasn't easy..

03:10

The first wind turbine that could produce megawatts of energy only lasted for 45

03:15

days before it um... broke. What's the return policy on these... While these days they've [Windmill falls down]

03:22

come up with a better model that's a lot less schlocky. If solar and wind power are

03:26

so great and efficient and we're running out of fossil fuels then why don't we use

03:30

more renewables? Well, good question. Wind power makes up a whopping 3.35%

03:35

of global electricity production full fired power plants on

03:40

the other hand make up about 41% of the world's electricity so

03:44

you know old king coal is still on his throne... But we still have some fossil

03:49

fuels left and coals still really cheap and available so why change? [Man with a trolley full of coal at a supermarket]

03:54

Climate change, climate change, right.. Well renewable energy is expensive compared

03:59

good old coal wind and solar power are really pricey to adopt and because of that not

04:03

many people want them for people to want them well they have to be cheap at least

04:07

competitive with coal and for them to be cheap people would have to, you guessed it

04:11

want them yeah catch 22. As much as we love them the sun and wind aren't as

04:15

reliable as coal fire. That means that renewable energy requires planning. [Smartly dressed people in a meeting room]

04:21

Where can we generate the most consistent energy? how do we store that

04:25

energy to make up for the dips in supply? what if it's cloudy with a chance of

04:29

meatballs? No those photovoltaic cells wont do much in that... [Meatballs fall from the sky onto solar panels]

Up Next

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

Related Videos

Fake News
11938 Views

How do you tell fake news from real news?

Jane Eyre Summary
123033 Views

When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...

What is Shmoop?
91412 Views

Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...

ACT Math 4.5 Elementary Algebra
492 Views

ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?