Energy policy/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Energy policy, or pages that link to Energy policy or to this page or whose text contains "Energy policy".
Parent topics
- Energy policy and global warming: results of various national policies on CO2 emissions [e]
- Economic development: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- Renewable energy: Energy derived from natural processes that are regularly replenished and includes solar power, wind power, hydroelectric power, geothermal power, bioenergy, and biofuels. [e]
- Sustainable energy: Energy that provides the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their energy needs. [e]
- Air pollution: The presence of contaminants or pollutant substances in the air (air pollutants) that interfere with human health or welfare, or produce other harmful environmental effects. [e]
- Electrical transmission: Add brief definition or description
- Energy efficiency: Add brief definition or description
- Fossil fuel: A substance such as coal, natural gas or petroleum with a high percentage of carbon that can be burned to produce heat or energy, whose extraction is destructive to the environment, whose burning pollutes the atmosphere, and whose supplies are finite and not renewable. [e]
- Cogeneration: Add brief definition or description
- Political spectrum [r]: A common way of referring to political positions by pointing out where they stand between two extremes on a one-dimensional line from left-to-right. [e]
- Liberal Party (UK) [r]: Former British political party, now a component of the Liberal Democrats. [e]
- National Security Council [r]: Both the senior foreign policy committee of principal officers of the executive branch of the United States of America, chaired by the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, and, by extension, the professional staff reporting to the Assistant [e]
- Sustainable energy [r]: Energy that provides the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their energy needs. [e]