As the name suggests, renewable energy means energy that can be renewed in the sense that the resource of energy is inexhaustible. It includes energy from such natural resources as wind, solar, hydel-power, tides, geothermal heat, bioenergy, wave energy, etc. In this article and those following this, we will discuss in details about these energy sources-both technical and non-technical.

Source: REN21-http://ren21.net/
Wind Energy:

Source: World Wind Energy Association-http://www.wwindea.org/home/index.php
One of the earliest resources of energy known to man, wind energy is coming to man’s rescue. In the year 2007, 19.696 MW of new wind energy capacity were added summing up to a global installed capacity of 93.849 MW by the end of December 2007. The added capacity equals a growth rate of 26.6 %, after 25.6 % in 2006. The currently installed wind power capacity generates 200 TWh per year; equaling 1.3 % of the global electricity consumption – in some countries and regions, wind energy already contributes 40 % and more. Total installed capacity has increased from 40 GW in 2003 to 93.85 GW in 2007. The following chart gives a country-wise installed capacity of a few countries.
Solar Energy:

Source: International Energy Agency: Solar Heating and Cooling Program-http://www.iea-shc.org/
Sun is an eternal source of energy. However, its potential as a source of energy is only being appreciated now. With an installed capacity of 70 GWth (as in 2001), solar thermal is one of the leading sources of renewable energy worldwide, and its potential is much higher. A number of solar thermal and solar photovoltaic power plants are coming up, which will generate hundreds of MWs of power. Solar energy can also be used in a variety of other applications such as cooking, heating, ventilation and air-conditioning, water heating, desalination and disinfection, lighting, etc. Presently the largest solar thermal power plant is in the Mojave Desert, California, with an installed capacity of 354 MW. The largest photovoltaic plant, however, is much smaller, having a capacity of 23 MW. Plants in excess of 500 MW capacities are under construction, thus promising solar energy a bright future.

Source: REN21-http://ren21.net/
Grid-connected solar photovoltaic (PV) continues to be the fastest-growing power generation technology in the world, with 50 percent annual increases in cumulative installed capacity in both 2006 and 2007, to an estimated 7.8 GW by the end of 2007. This capacity translates into an estimated 1.5 million homes with rooftop solar PV feeding into the grid worldwide.
Hydropower:
Hydropower includes all kinds of energy sources harnessing the power of running water. They are:
1) Hydroelectricity
2) Tidal power
3) Wave power
4) Micro-hydel power-both dammed and run-of-river
5) Ocean thermal Energy Conversion
Hydroelectricity is the most widely used form of renewable energy. Hydroelectricity supplies about 715,000 MW or about 19% of world electricity generation, accounting for over 63% of the total electricity from renewable sources in 2005.
The world’s first commercial wave farm is planned for Portugal, at the Aguçadora Wave Park near Povoa de Varzim. The wave farm will use three Pelamis P-750 machines with a capacity of 2.25 megawatts, enough to meet the average electricity demand of more than 1,500 Portuguese households.
Ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) is a method for generating electricity, which uses the temperature difference that exists between deep and shallow waters to run a heat engine. OTEC projects on the drawing board include a small plant for the U.S. Navy base on the British-administered island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. OCEES International, Inc. is working with the U.S. Navy on a design for a proposed 13 MW OTEC plant, which would replace the current power plant running diesel generators. The OTEC plant would also provide 1.25 MGD of potable water to the base. A private U.S. company also has proposed building at 10 MW OTEC plant on Guam.
During 2005, small hydro installations grew by 8% to raise the total world small hydro capacity to 66 GW. Over 50% of this was in China (with 38.5 GW), followed by Japan (3.5 GW) and the United States (3 GW). China plans to electrify a further 10,000 villages by 2010 under their China Village Electrification Program using renewable energy, including further investments in small hydro and photovoltaic.
Geothermal power:
Geothermal provides almost 10 GW of power capacity, growing at roughly 2–3 percent per year. Most of this is in Italy, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, the Philippines, and the United States, with additional capacity in several other countries. Iceland gets a quarter of all its power from geothermal.
Bioenergy:

Source: REN21-http://www.ren21.net/
An estimated 45 GW of biomass power capacity existed in 2006. The United Kingdom has seen recent growth in “co-firing” (burning small shares of biomass in coal-fired power plants). The use of biomass for district heating and combined heat-and-power (CHP) has been expanding in Austria, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, and the Baltic countries, and now provides substantial shares (5–50 percent) of district heating fuel. Bioenergy also includes energy from ethanol and biodiesel. Production of fuel ethanol for vehicles reached 39 billion liters in 2006, an 18 percent increase from 2005. Biodiesel production jumped 50 percent in 2006, to over 6 billion liters globally.