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Bernard MULTON: Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering - Doctorate from the University of Paris 6 - University Professor at the École Normale Supérieure de Cachan-Antenne de Bretagne
INTRODUCTION
Electricity, the clean form of energy par excellence, is currently produced, to the tune of 80%, by burning fossil fuels or uranium 235 (nuclear fission), both of which are exhaustible resources
After many ups and downs, environmental constraints, the approaching exhaustion of fossil and fissile resources, and concerns about energy independence have since the 1990s led to a significant take-off in renewable electricity generation, which we call "new", i.e. excluding "large hydro".
The main aim of this article is to raise the reader's awareness of developments in "new sectors" and their energy and economic potential. However, it is far from exhaustive, particularly in the most emerging fields where "economic nature" has not yet made a selection.
Readers will find compare these different types of energy source.
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