Sentences with phrase «cubic meters over»

World Health Organization and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency soot «standards are 25 micrograms per cubic meter over 24 hours.

Not exact matches

Dragon had about 111 million cubic meters of gas in storage on Monday, or just over a quarter of Tuesday's anticipated demand, having not received a tanker since January.
We are exporting in cubic meters enough logs to keep over 70 sawmills operating per year and the communities of at least 3500 residence per mill.
One of the world's largest natural springs, over 900,000 cubic meters of water overflows from the Ölfus Spring into the ocean every day.
A Natural, Renewable Product With over 900,000 cubic meters of water overflowing from the Ölfus Spring into the ocean every day, it's one of the world's largest natural springs.
In fact, mold spore counts are usually in the thousands per cubic meter (they can reach over 15,000 per cubic meter), while tree pollen counts reach 3,000 to 4,000 per cubic meter and grass counts only climb to the hundreds per cubic meter.
But large slides (such as the 30 - million - cubic - meter flow that occurred in Mesa County, Colorado, and ran more than 4.5 kilometers in 2014, shown) can sometimes travel more than 20 times farther than they fall — and sometimes even, like a fluid, slosh up and over hills.
For instance, 23 of the 44 dangerous lakes identified by ICIMOD do not have steep moraine dams, and only five of them have a potential flood volume over 10 million cubic meters.
Using a modern version of the Hexagon satellite called the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER), the team screened 2276 large glacial lakes in the Himalayas and found that 49 of them have potential flood volumes of over 10 million cubic meters, which are generally considered to be major floods.
It can cost from just under $ 1 to well over $ 2 to produce one cubic meter (264 gallons) of desalted water from the ocean.
This week, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne personally supervised the release of 41,500 cubic feet (1,175 cubic meters) of water per second over a 60 - hour period to mimic a natural flood that will enlarge existing sandbars.
We had a huge chamber, with about eight cubic meters of air, and the whole idea was to have air that is as clean as you have over the Pacific, and then of course, to be able to control what's in the chamber.
OSHA has set a legal limit for aluminum in dusts (averaged over an 8 hour work day) for 15 mg / m3 (milligram / cubic meter) total dust.
Forming the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe, during rainy season more than five hundred million cubic meters of water plummet over the two kilometer wide brink every minute.
During peak flow season, the volume of water flowing over Niagara Falls averages a whopping 6,400 cubic meters per second.
«Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters)» took over the atrium at The Museum of Modern Art through February 2, 2009.
That oil in - place is heavy oil, with a density close to a metric tonne per cubic meter, so the associated carbon adds up to about 230 gigatonnes — essentially enough to close the «game over» gap.
The house is designed for low energy consumption; the family only used 2 cubic meters of wood for heating over the course of an entire year.
This pronouncement comes in the wake of extreme drought conditions currently afflicting central and northern China, and statistics released over the weekend that shows China experiences an annual deficit of 40 billion cubic meters of water, with almost two thirds of all cities experiencing varying degrees of water shortage and 200 million rural dwellers facing drinking water shortages.
The only problem with all the predictions about the level of the World Ocean rising is that, the World Ocean is refusing to rise up in support of the predictions, the other problem is that ice is frozen fresh water and frozen fresh water only covers about 5 % of this planet above sea level and frozen water under the level of the World Ocean does not count as the World Ocean will fall a small amount if that ice melts, so if the ice there is enough to get the World Ocean to rise and significant amount then it must be piled up very high, I cubic kilometer of water as ice, should it melt, would make 1000 square kilometers rise by one meter, so when you use this simple math then somewhere on the planet, above the level of the sea, then there must be over 500,000 cubic kilometers of ice, piled up and just waiting to melt, strange that no one can find that amount of ice, all these morons who talk about the rise of the World Ocean in tens of meters, this includes you Peter Garrett or Mr. 7 Meters, the ice does not exist to allow this amount of rise in the World Ocean, it is just not meters, this includes you Peter Garrett or Mr. 7 Meters, the ice does not exist to allow this amount of rise in the World Ocean, it is just not Meters, the ice does not exist to allow this amount of rise in the World Ocean, it is just not there.
Peter Garrett, said «seven meters» and other have said far larger figures then my math still works, as long as the two variables are ignored that is, so in a case where the sea may rise 7 meters then the water needed would be 2,527,000 cubic kilometers of water and in one mass then that would be a cube of water with the side over 134 kilometers, those two variables that I can not deal with are exponential, that is, the higher you go the greater they get.
The models» composite annual mean OA surface air concentrations exceed 0.5 microgram of carbon per cubic meter across most continental regions, as shown at the left of Fig. 3, with maximum concentrations primarily over biomass burning regions and secondarily over industrialized areas.
Over this period, reconstructed Colorado River flows averaged 14.2 billion cubic meters (BCM) per year, the area of the Southwest under drought averaged 65.5 %, and average annual maximum temperatures were 15.65 °C.
According to the US Department of Energy (Energy Information Administration), the world consumption of energy in all of its forms (barrels of petroleum, cubic meters of natural gas, watts of hydro power, etc.) is projected to reach 678 quadrillion Btu (or 715 exajoules) by 2030 — a 44 % increase over 2008 levels (levels for 1980 were 283 quadrillion Btu and we stand at around 500 quadrillion Btu today in 2009).
According to the US Department of Energy (Energy Information Administration), the world consumption of energy in all of its forms (barrels of petroleum, cubic meters of natural gas, watts of hydro power, etc.) is projected to reach 678 quadrillion Btu (or 7.15 exajoules) by 2030 - a 44 % increase over 2008 levels (levels for 1980 were 283 quadrillion Btu and we stand at around 500 quadrillion Btu today).
Estimates produced for about 60 countries around the world revealed that gas flaring has remained largely stable over the last 12 years — in the range of 150 - 170 billion cubic meters annually — although 22 mostly lesser developed countries increased its use over that period (on the other hand, 16 other countries decreased its use).
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