Fuels
in sentence
1107 examples of Fuels in a sentence
Now, whether we're talking about
fuels
or energy carriers, or perhaps novel materials for batteries or fuel cells, nature hasn't ever built those perfect materials yet because nature didn't need to.
They hold on, for example, to the fossils that fueled the last century of growth, but you know that better, cleaner more abundant
fuels
await us, and you know that that abundance can lead the world to more energy, more mobility and more freedom.
So when you add up the greenhouse gases in the lifetime of these various energy sources, nuclear is down there with wind and hydro, below solar and way below, obviously, all the fossil
fuels.
And all the burning of oil and coal and gas, all the fossil fuels, have changed the atmosphere greatly.
People who sell us fossil
fuels.
Whether that's getting a much more efficient car and also kind of building markets for new cars and new
fuels
down the road, this is where we need to be.
You know, we're pumping out lots of CO2 into the atmosphere, from fossil fuels, from cement production.
It's the crowd that shines the light and
fuels
the desire, but the light and desire are a lethal one-two combination that attract new people to the crowd.
What ultimately
fuels
Nami's rage is watching a prostitute die outside her cell, a victim of a forced late-term abortion, left to bleed to death.
The Elliot character goes through the same sequence of encounters as Horner, from big fanfare signing, early success that
fuels
an already ravenous sports media, and the ensuing slump that spurs frustration, alienation from teammates, fans and media, and the resulting disillusionment that prompts a desire to go back home to the US.
The love story that
fuels
the plot is uninteresting, the two ladies are the only ones with any acting ability, there's another group of musical stooges that are unfunny, unless you consider their attempts at being funny to be sadly buffoonish.
The helpful ronin for example is a nobly inscrutable revolutionary character, upsetting the established order without being painted as a truly likable or heroic figure, Zatoichi himself makes one or two mistakes and causes harm by his actions, whilst the ruling system
fuels
the exploitation of the poor.
thus creating the competitive situation that
fuels
the film.
In the film Anais is inspired by Henry and June to descend into a world of debauchery that
fuels
her erotic writing.
His deadpan delivery and obliviousness to his own shortcomings (or maybe it's denial, tough to tell from just one episode) is really what
fuels
the comedy here.
While this film may seem academically sound and well-researched, it does not once mention what I thought was rather widely regarded as the most practicable alternative to petroleum fuel, the conversion of coal into synthetic
fuels
using the Fischer-Tropsch process.
The use of baseball in the film is manifested in a brilliant way as it
fuels
the story within the characters intersecting lives.
Spawning a need for more gay political leaders, the legislation
fuels
a grassroots movement to obtain a larger political influence which in the third beat, may or may not turn out the way the viewer would expect.
Yet, with very few exceptions, governments have failed to take sufficient action to halt climate change, and most exacerbate the danger by continuing to support the use of fossil
fuels.
The plant – which is expected to be operational in 2017 – is yet another harbinger of a future in which renewable energy crowds out conventional fossil
fuels.
Solar power plants provide insurance against fossil fuels’ inherent price volatility.
Technological breakthroughs have boosted these energy sources’ competitiveness relative to fossil
fuels.
On the other hand, we hear the defiant suggestion that Trump’s decision might not be so important, because renewable energy is already becoming so cheap that a future without fossil
fuels
has nearly arrived.
Gore claims the planet is in the midst of an “inevitable transition to a clean energy economy,” and Steyer recently said that the time when “renewables plus storage is cheaper than fossil fuels” has already arrived.
And green energy is far from locked in as a cost-effective replacement for fossil
fuels.
This is not what an economy in the midst of an “inevitable” shift away from fossil
fuels
looks like.
Solar and wind energy depend on considerable subsidies because in most contexts, they remain more expensive than fossil
fuels.
But if green energy were already competitive or near-competitive with fossil fuels, the Paris agreement would be unnecessary.
The entire world would be dumping fossil
fuels
for the cheaper, better option.
It’s not very complicated: We must end wasteful subsidies for both fossil
fuels
and inefficient solar and wind.
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