Wind turbines and solar panels generate electricity. They can be placed on land and at sea. Solar panels can be placed on rooftops but we also see more solar farms in the country side.
Gas fired power plant
There are different ways to produce power. A gas fired power plant burns natural gas to generate electricity. Natural gas can be found in rocks thousands meters underground.
Heavy road transport
Millions of trucks transport the goods that we use. Open trucks, trucks with trailers, refrigerated trucks, concrete mixer trucks, and many more. All these trucks use energy to drive.
Nuclear power plant
There are different ways to produce power. A nuclear power plant uses uranium – a silvery metal that can be found in rocks – to generate electricity.
Direct Air Capture and CO2 pipeline
To stop climate change we need to drastically reduce CO2 emissions. CO2 can be captured at one source (chemical plant, cement factory, power plant) but can also be “sucked” from the air. Captured CO2 can be permantently stored or used.
Refuelling station for various energy carriers
Refuelling stations are rapidly changing. In addition to conventional refuelling (diesel, petrol, LPG), alternatives are becoming available like hydrogen, biodiesel and EV charging.
Marine energy
We see an installation placed in the river that uses the current to generate power. Marine energy – ocean waves, currents, tides, and temperature changes – can be a continuous source of renewable energy.
Coal fired power plant with biomass co-firing
There are different ways to produce power. A coal fired power plant burns coal to generate electricity. Coal can be found underground. Co-firing coal and biomass reduces the plant’s CO2 emissions.
Geothermal spudding
We are present at the festive start of geothermal drilling, also called spudding.
Installation heat pump
We see the installation of the outdoor unit of an electric heat pump.
