Sentences with phrase «cubic metres at»

Germany has Europe's largest gas storage system, with space for 23 billion cubic metres at 47 facilities, writes Schaudwet.

Not exact matches

«The total volume of the room, when empty, divided by the number of people normally working in it should be at least 11 cubic metres.
Trump's central campaign promise, as you know, is to build a «big, beautiful, powerful wall» along the U.S. - Mexico border, which analysts at investment firm Bernstein estimate could cost anywhere between $ 15 billion and $ 25 billion, requiring 7 million cubic metres of concrete and 2.4 million tonnes of cement, among other materials.
But in 2014 the government's monthly report valued bitumen at $ 421 per cubic metre.
It is making daily tanker collections of 150 cubic metres of waste water created during cider production at the Bevisol plant in Ledbury, Herefordshire.
At present, the density of ordinary baryons and radiation in the universe is estimated to be equivalent to about one hydrogen atom per cubic metre of space.
Now we know that the diverted river dumped about 30 per cent of the sediment it was carrying — 5 million cubic metres of sand — and it became new land, says Jeffrey Nittrouer at the University of Illinois in Urbana - Champaign (Nature Geoscience, DOI: 10.1038 / ngeo1525).
The highest level — 5809 becquerels of radon per cubic metre — was in the Sakhm Khat Pyramid at Saggara, south of Cairo.
The study shows that the annual volume of SGD for the whole Mediterranean basin ranges from 30 to 500 billion cubic metres, which demonstrates that this process is relevant at large scale and its discharge is similar or up to 15 times greater than that of river water inputs.
Measurements show that CO2 appears to be building up in the lake at about 5 million cubic metres a year, he says, while no evidence has been found of a volcanic eruption.
Dr Anja Schmidt from the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds, who led the study, said: «The eruption discharged lava at a rate of more than 200 cubic metres per second, which is equivalent to filling five Olympic - sized swimming pools in a minute.
«Last year western Germany alone produced 6000 cubic metres of the type of waste which would be stored at Konrad,» says Viehl.
«And 50 000 cubic metres of waste is currently being stored at temporary sites.»
Thirteen such shafts along the Victoria line have recently been updated with these more powerful fans, which can extract hot air at a rate of 75 cubic metres per second.
Ozone was recorded at 160 micrograms per cubic metre, a level considered moderate - to - high on the UK's pollution index and almost twice as high as Aberdeen, which had the UK's worst ozone levels at time of writing.
objectives include: Year 6 objectives • solve problems involving the calculation and conversion of units of measure, using decimal notation up to 3 decimal places where appropriate • use, read, write and convert between standard units, converting measurements of length, mass, volume and time from a smaller unit of measure to a larger unit, and vice versa, using decimal notation to up to 3 decimal places • convert between miles and kilometres • recognise that shapes with the same areas can have different perimeters and vice versa • recognise when it is possible to use formulae for area and volume of shapes • calculate the area of parallelograms and triangles • calculate, estimate and compare volume of cubes and cuboids using standard units, including cubic centimetres (cm ³) and cubic metres (m ³), and extending to other units [for example, mm ³ and km ³] • express missing number problems algebraically • find pairs of numbers that satisfy an equation with 2 unknowns • enumerate possibilities of combinations of 2 variables • draw 2 - D shapes using given dimensions and angles • recognise, describe and build simple 3 - D shapes, including making nets • compare and classify geometric shapes based on their properties and sizes and find unknown angles in any triangles, quadrilaterals, and regular polygons • illustrate and name parts of circles, including radius, diameter and circumference and know that the diameter is twice the radius • recognise angles where they meet at a point, are on a straight line, or are vertically opposite, and find missing angles • describe positions on the full coordinate grid (all 4 quadrants) • draw and translate simple shapes on the coordinate plane, and reflect them in the axes • interpret and construct pie charts and line graphs and use these to solve problems • calculate and interpret the mean as an average • read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10,000,000 and determine the value of each digit • round any whole number to a required degree of accuracy and more!
Reconstruction deposited nearly 3,000,000 cubic yards (2,300,000 cubic metres) of landslide material on the coast, at the base of the slope.
Using a whole suite of climate models (the CMIP5 models), we have tested how well our temperature - based estimate can reflect the actual trend of the AMOC, and have arrived at an uncertainty of plus or minus one million cubic metres per second.
Their findings showed a startling 218 - 990 million hectares of land would have to be converted to switchgrass (which is 14 - 65 times as much land as the US uses to grow corn for ethanol); also 17 - 79 million tonnes of fertiliser a year — which would be 75 % of all global nitrogen fertiliser used at present; and 1.6 - 7.4 trillion cubic metres of water a year.
By 2007, it was difficult to deny the role of warmer winter temperatures in a mountain pine beetle epidemic that had already killed at least 530 million cubic metres of interior lodge - pole pine, with no end in sight.
Estimates of the amount of oil they contain vary hugely, but Navigant, a consultancy, reckons that North America could produce anything from 26.9 - 53.5 trillion cubic metres of shale gas alone, enough to satisfy the world's total current demand for gas for up to 15 years, though at today's prices not all of it would yet be worth extracting.
The authors drew on available data to establish global reserves at 1,294 billion barrels of oil, 192 trillion cubic metres of gas, 728 Gt of hard coal and 276 Gt of lignite.
Over the last 15 years global consumption of woodfuel has remained relatively stable, at between 1.8 and 1.9 billion cubic metres.
Global Witness» investigations reveal that China is the lead importer of timber from Burma which amounts to more than one million cubic metres a year at a value of around US$ 250 million.
[5] One litre of fully saturated methane clathrate solid would therefore contain about 120 grams of methane (or around 169 litres of methane gas at 0 °C and 1 atm), [nb 1] or one cubic metre of methane clathrate releases about 160 cubic metres of gas.
As of the end of 2005, known world gas resources are estimated at 246.1 trillion cubic metres (Tcm)(table 7).
When this in turn emptied, the researchers calculated that the flow from the subglacial lake was at a rate of 215 cubic metres per second.
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