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Feasting On Fuel: A Video Explainer

Inside Energy

This Thanksgiving our holiday feast will contain 4500 calories. Those calories are just a measure of energy, and that food was produced using fossil fuels. In this video, Inside Energy's Dan Boyce explains how fossil fuels are, in fact, your food:

Despite the fact our turkey dinner konks us out, we all understand food is energy for our bodies, and that energy is actually the same energy that runs our cars, that heats our homes and that charges our phones.

See, almost all of the energy on our planet is solar, or really, it’s nuclear. That sun energy beams down to the earth’s surface where it’s happily lapped up by plants, which can convert that energy.  That's something we animals cannot do, but we can eat the plants and steal their energy or eat the other animals that ate the plants and get it that way. It’s all the same energy, just moving around.

This has been going on for hundreds of millions of years, back then, a lot of those plants, and some of the animals were covered up by sand and mud and rocks, and their sun energy was trapped before anybody else could get to it. Eons pass and those plants and animals changed into coal, oil and natural gas, which we discovered we can set on fire, and get that stored sun energy back.

Today we use a lot of that fuel to grow the food we need to fuel ourselves. In fact, 30-percent of our modern global energy use goes toward food production, most of it coming from the stored sun energy in dead prehistoric plants and animals.

Dan Boyce moved to the Inside Energy team at Rocky Mountain PBS in 2014, after five years of television and radio reporting in his home state of Montana. In his most recent role as Montana Public Radio’s Capitol Bureau Chief, Dan produced daily stories on state politics and government.
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