Sentences with phrase «changes to accounting frameworks»

The author then applies that framework to the housing bubble, the possible higher education bubble, changes to accounting frameworks as rising preferences change, and where we are today in the markets.

Not exact matches

«When a discipline is in crisis, attempts are made to change or supplement its thesis within the terms of its basic framework — a procedure one might call «Ptolemization» (since when data poured in which clashed with Ptolemy's earth - centered astronomy, his partisans introduced additional complications to account for the anomalies).
At the Rainforest Alliance, we've developed a preliminary framework to help determine farm and landscape level diversification strategies, taking into account criteria such as farm location and geography, climate change threats and farm age.
The Government announced its intention to create a new framework for aviation in the UK, to replace the previous government's 2003 White Paper, «The Future of Air Transport», which it said «failed to take sufficient account of climate change and the impact of aviation on local communities.»
While the new formula, which accounts for both temperature and salinity, can be used to forecast tropical cyclone intensity in real time, it can also be applied to the results of climate modeling to provide scientists with a framework to evaluate changes in future tropical cyclone activity.
Future carbon accounting frameworks will need to cover all land uses and land use changes in order to fully recognize the land use sector's mitigation contribution.
The new findings stem from an analysis that links a widely - used framework for projecting how sea level around the world will respond to climate change to a model that accounts for recently identified processes contributing to Antarctic ice loss.
Utilize a multi-dimensional framework that takes into account the patients» lifestyle factors (including emotional state, financial and socioeconomic influences and readiness - to - change assessment), physiological systems, signs and symptoms, sources of stress, nutrition focused physical findings, core clinical imbalances, labs, and dietary patterns in the assessment and planning of the nutrition care process.
Such a framework provides a flexible way to incorporate different gameplay aspects and takes into account what players are willing to change.
Due to changes in international carbon accounting frameworks, the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) and CDP, more and more businesses are purchasing renewable energy certificates to report reductions in their carbon footprints.
To know what these high numbers mean for local changes on the world's coastlines, you need a framework that accounts for all the key drivers: among them not just Antarctica, but also Greenland, mountain glaciers, the expansion of the warming ocean, changes in winds and current, shifts in Earth's gravitational field, and land motion.
The new findings stem from an analysis that links a widely - used framework for projecting how sea level around the world will respond to climate change to a model that accounts for recently identified processes contributing to Antarctic ice loss.
Importantly, it provides a superior framework to assess the vulnerability of marine biota to changes in pH. This approach allows the experimental and modelling frameworks that take account of the full suite of effects rather than just the scenarios derived from OA by anthropogenic CO2 alone, which may not adequately portray the range of possible future scenarios (Hendriks et al. 2010a, b; Hofmann et al. 2011), to be proposed.
The TCFD recommendations draw from existing climate change reporting frameworks such as the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Standards; it doesn't seek to force companies to invest in yet another set of surveys or information - gathering exercises.
The failure to account for different environments points to the main problem with the planetary boundaries framework: it only measures environmental change as negative — as progression toward supposed biophysical boundaries — and never as positive, either for humans (e.g., more food) or environments (e.g., higher yields resulting in less deforestation).
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