The Energy Equation-Coal
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 13
 - File Size:
 - 400 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1978
 
Abstract
This paper covers only the energy uses of natural resources and does not deal with non- energy uses, which in 1975 were of the order of  10 per cent of the total consumption of energy  resources. The United Nations `J' Series of Statistics ex- presses each of the various forms of energy in  terms of its coal equivalent in metric tonnes and  this basis is followed in this paper. One tonne  of black coal (referred to as tce) has been taken  as the equivalent of the following. 29 X 109 joules or 27.5 X 106 Btu  0.68 tonnes or 4.8 barrels of crude oil 750 cubic metres or 26.5 X 103 cubic feet of  natural gas 1 ò5 to 3.3 tonnes of peat or lignite (world average  2.54; Victorian brown coal 3 0) 8055 kWh (at 3.6 X 106 joules or 3412 Btu per  kWh at 100% efficiency) 2660 kWh at 33% efficiency of generation 50 grams of uranium present in natural uranium  reactors (see note later under nuclear energy)  0.8 grams natural uranium in breeder reactors  Nuclear and hydro electricity are expressed as the coal equivalent required to produce, at 33 per  cent efficiency, the same amount of electricity.  In other words, electricity produced by these  sources is converted to its coal equivalent at the  rate of 2660 kWh = 1 tonne coal.
Citation
APA: (1978) The Energy Equation-Coal
MLA: The Energy Equation-Coal. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1978.