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NON-RENEWABLE RESOURCES


Wyoming coal mine. Coal, along with many other resources is harvested at a vastly unsustainable rate.

A 'non-renewable resource' is a natural resource that cannot be re-made, re-grown or regenerated on a scale comparative to its consumption. It exists in a fixed amount that is being renewed or is used up faster than it can be made by nature. Often fossil fuels, such as coal, petroleum, and natural gas are considered non-renewable resources, as they do not naturally re-form at a rate that makes the way we use them sustainable. A renewable resource differs in that it may be used but not used up.
This is as opposed to natural resources such as timber, which re-grows naturally and can, in theory, be harvested sustainably at a constant rate without depleting the existing resource pool and resources such as metals, which, although they are not replenished, are not destroyed when used and can be recycled.
A non-renewable resource is always drawn down with anabolic processes that use up energy.

Contents
Carbon-based non-renewables
Resource demand
Economic models
See also
References

Carbon-based non-renewables


Natural resources such as coal, oil, or natural gas, take millions of years to form naturally and cannot be replaced as fast as they are consumed. Eventually they will be used up. At present, the main energy sources used by humans are non-renewable; renewable resources, such as solar, tidal, wind, and geothermal power have so far been less exploited.
Fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas generate a considerable amount of energy when they are burnt (the process of combustion). Non-renewable resources have a high carbon content because their origin lies in the photosynthetic activity of plants millions of years ago. The fuels release this carbon back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. The rate at which such fuels are being burnt is thus resulting in a rise in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, a cause of the greenhouse effect. The sun can also be a nonrenewable resource in some ways.
A temporary oil drilling rig in Western Australia

Natural resources are replaced by natural processes given unresonable amount of time. Soil, water, forests, plants, and animals are all renewable resources as long as they are properly conserved. Solar, wind, wave, and geothermal energies are based on renewable resources. However, non-renewable resources may take billions of years to form.
Renewable resources such as water, wind power, sun, etc are practically infinite - they cannot be depleted - unlike their non-renewable counterparts, which will have run out by 2200.
nistara

Resource demand


Demands for resources made by rich nations are causing concern that the present and future demands of industrial societies cannot be sustained for more than a decade or two, and that this will be at the expense of the developing world and the global environment. Other authorities believe that new technologies will be developed, enabling resources that are now of little importance to replace those that people are using up.

Economic models


Hotelling's rule is a 1931 economic model of non-renewable resource management by Harold Hotelling. It shows that efficient exploitation of a nonrenewable and nonaugmentable resource would, under otherwise stable economic conditions, lead to a depletion of the resource. The rule states that this would lead to a net price or "Hotelling rent" for it that rose annually at a rate equal to the rate of interest, reflecting the increasing scarcity of the resource.
The Hartwick Rule provides an important result about the sustainability of welfare in an economy that uses non-renewable resources.

See also



Energy conservation

Green design

Liebig's law of the minimum

References



Non-Renewable Resources at NASA.gov

Electricity from Non-Hydroelectric Renewable Energy Sources at EPA.gov

non-renewable energy resource at EPA.gov

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