How To Create Alternative Energy

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic by 4 people | Log in to rate

Ranked #1,144 in Green, #138,619 overall

Are You Looking To Create Alternative Energy?

"How Would You Like To UNPLUG Your
House From Your Electrical Company,
Knowing That You Are "100% Powered
By Nature" With Alternative Energy?

Why You Absolutely NEED Your Own Home Made Energy 

Are you suffering from buying the electricity for your home? Are you suffering from the high cost electricity bill that comes to you every month? Why don't you generate your own electricity instead of buying it.

Building sources for electricity is not that hard, you can build your own solar panel and wind turbine to power all devices in your home. By doing that, you can dramatically reduce the power bill by 80%. You can even cut the whole electricity bill forever.

The main point with this issue is that I had to learn how exactly the solar panel and windmills work and how you can build them by hand. You need a step-by-step guide to build these systems yourself. You can build these for very little money.

Why should you build your own home power system? I told you that because I know that the ready home power systems like home wind turbines and home solar panels are not expensive and will cost you less money than you pay for your electricity in a year.

When you can generate your own electricity for your home, you can save your money by 80%, you can save your environment because the solar and wind energy resources are very clean energy resources and you can save your children. Take the first step to build all electricity you need for your home and start building your very own solar panels and wind power systems right today not tomorrow.

The average family spends roughly $2500 on electricity each year. If you'd like to save that much by easily tapping solar renewable energy and creating your own natural electricity, visit www.easyhomemadeenergy.com

7 Reasons Why You Absolutely Need Your Own Home Made Energy 

1. You will save hundreds of dollars a month... and thousands of dollars a year... for the rest of your life...

2. You will help our environment and maybe more and more people will follow us in supporting the future of Earth...

3. You will have a lot of fun in building your own power systems. You can do it with your close friends and family during a week-end and everyone will enjoy it...

4. You will be able to go completely off-grid if you want, knowing that rising energy prices will not affect you...

5. You will be able to make the electricity company pay you, because the surplus of what you produce will make the meter go the other way, in case you want to stay on-grid...

6. You will be able to protect your pocket book during these recession times and spend money on more important things...

7. You will feel very good because you know you've done something great and you will have the wisdom to be part of the solution, not the problem...

For more info visit www.easyhomemadeenergy.com

Solar 

The Department of Energy's Solar Energy Technology Program, managed by the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy accelerates the development of solar technologies as energy sources for the nation and world. The solar program also educates the public about the value of solar as a secure, reliable, and clean energy choice.

Developing technologies that take advantage of the clean abundant energy of the sun is important to reducing greenhouse gasses and helps stimulate the economy. Examples of solar technologies being developed by the Department of Energy and Industry are Photovoltaic cells, concentrating solar power technologies and low temperature solar collectors.

Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight directly into electricity and are made of semiconductors such as crystalline silicon or various thin-film materials. Photovoltaics can provide tiny amounts of power for watches, large amounts for the electric grid, and everything in between.

Concentrating solar power technologies use reflective materials to concentrate the sun's heat energy, which ultimately drives a generator to produce electricity. These technologies include dish/engine systems, parabolic troughs, and central power towers.

Low-temperature solar collectors also absorb the sun's heat energy, but the heat is used directly for hot water or space heating for residential, commercial, and industrial facilities.

You can also find info on how to build your own solar panel here:www.easyhomemadeenergy.com

 

Wind 

Since early recorded history, people have been harnessing the energy of the wind. Wind energy propelled boats along the Nile River as early as 5000 B.C. By 200 B.C., simple windmills in China were pumping water, while vertical-axis windmills with woven reed sails were grinding grain in Persia and the Middle East.

Photo of a windmill that pumps water on the Great Plains.

Early in the twentieth century, windmills were commonly used across the Great Plains to pump water and to generate electricity.

New ways of using the energy of the wind eventually spread around the world. By the 11th century, people in the Middle East were using windmills extensively for food production; returning merchants and crusaders carried this idea back to Europe. The Dutch refined the windmill and adapted it for draining lakes and marshes in the Rhine River Delta. When settlers took this technology to the New World in the late 19th century, they began using windmills to pump water for farms and ranches, and later, to generate electricity for homes and industry.

Industrialization, first in Europe and later in America, led to a gradual decline in the use of windmills. The steam engine replaced European water-pumping windmills. In the 1930s, the Rural Electrification Administration's programs brought inexpensive electric power to most rural areas in the United States.

However, industrialization also sparked the development of larger windmills to generate electricity. Commonly called wind turbines, these machines appeared in Denmark as early as 1890. In the 1940s the largest wind turbine of the time began operating on a Vermont hilltop known as Grandpa's Knob. This turbine, rated at 1.25 megawatts in winds of about 30 mph, fed electric power to the local utility network for several months during World War II.

The popularity of using the energy in the wind has always fluctuated with the price of fossil fuels. When fuel prices fell after World War II, interest in wind turbines waned. But when the price of oil skyrocketed in the 1970s, so did worldwide interest in wind turbine generators.

The wind turbine technology R&D that followed the oil embargoes of the 1970s refined old ideas and introduced new ways of converting wind energy into useful power. Many of these approaches have been demonstrated in "wind farms" or wind power plants - groups of turbines that feed electricity into the utility grid - in the United States and Europe.

Today, the lessons learned from more than a decade of operating wind power plants, along with continuing R&D, have made wind-generated electricity very close in cost to the power from conventional utility generation in some locations. Wind energy is the world's fastest-growing energy source and will power industry, businesses and homes with clean, renewable electricity for many years to come.

You can also learn how to make a windmill for your home here:www.easyhomemadeenergy.com

 

New RSS: Alternative Energy 

Loading Fetching RSS feed... please stand by

Reader Feedback 

submit

by Budman83

Hello world. (more)

Explore related pages

Create a Lens!