In this coursework you are supposed to develop a targeted and coherent academic essay in which you provide an analysis and assessment of the potential of one particularly renewable energy technology in a country of your choice. This should include an analysis of how far the respective potentials are currently been exploited. It is important to distinguish between various types of potential, including resource, technical, economic, and market. Please see the figure below that will illustrate key assumptions. It is advisable to use the general scheme of this figure to structure the essay (WILL SEND FIG DIAGRAM AS AN ATTACHMENT. There is no limit to diagrammatic material that you may include. Figures, tables, graphs and diagrams are not included in the word limit. You may also include footnotes or endnotes, but please keep these to a minimum. Your essay must not be drawn entirely from webbased sources; you are required to consult written materials such as books and journal papers. The use of wikipedia as primary source is discouraged! Any points that are attributable to authors of published works (or unpublished reports) must be referenced in the text. Please reference sources consistently throughout your work. A full list of references should be included in a bibliography at the end of your essay. This reference list does not count as part of your word limit. Credit will be given for the good use of a range of appropriate references. Credits will also be given for the use of a consistent use of an accepted academic referencing style. For more details on this, please consult https://www.bbk.ac.uk/mybirkbeck/services/facilities/support/bibliography Good marks will be awarded to essays that show evidence of: ? clear use and contextualisation of the various concepts of ‘potential’ ? thorough academic research basis, where possible, academic sources such as peerreviewed journal articles, books or reports of governments, NGOs, or trade organisations. ? competent analysis and synthesis of the accessed material; and ? good organisation and presentation