
WC3
Electrical Energy
Most of the countries use energy that comes from the sun. For plants that use sunlight to make photosynthesis, almost all life on Earth depends on solar energy. Below is a chart showing consumption of electricity per capita worldwide.

According to Alves (2021), Canada used the most power per capita in the world, averaging 15.4 megawatt hours for all residents. This much-used electricity around the world is called electric energy. According to a vocabulary definition, "Electrical energy is the force that charged particles of an atom must act or move an object. The movement of electrons from one atom to another results in electrical energy". Electrical energy may be potential or kinetic energy, usually encountering potential energy. This potential energy is stored energy due to the relative position of a charged particle or electric field. The current or electricity is the movement of charged particles through media or wires. There is static electricity, a form of electric potential energy which imbalances and separates positive and negative charges of an object (Anne Marie Helmenstine, 2019). By all the numbers involved in electricity, people tend to be puzzled. A measure of the force that causes electricity to flow is a voltage in electricity. Most electricity came from telegraph poles at 240 volts, in most houses (2019).
In the United States, they use a complex network of power plants, end-power users, and power lines which is an electric system used. To turn out renewable resources such as solar energy, nuclear energy, coal, natural gas, water, or wind energy, most Americans receive electricity from centralized power plants which use a wide variety of energy resources. Using a variety of sources, the United States produces electricity, which are natural gas, coal, and nuclear power. Wind and solar power are the fastest growing renewable resources. People should imagine a life without electricity before lamenting the price of electricity. There would be no lights to light up the road, and all electric devices would not work. Along with the tremendous benefits of power, there are some easy ways to get energy. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (2013), 67 percent of the nation's electricity was produced with fossil fuels such as natural gas, coal and petroleum. To add more, people can get electricity from hydroelectric power generation which uses the energy of falling water. Living in windy or solar energy- rich areas, these two sources of energy can be an attractive energy choice. By using heat below the Earth's surface to make steam that rotates the turbine, it enables the generation of electricity. From resources such as trees, fuel crops, and agricultural waste, people can also generate electricity from a substance which is called biomass (Lee, 2019).