Sentences with phrase «current global consumption»

He claimed that by February 2020, the electricity consumption of mining operations will be similar to the current global consumption.
(finally we're talking about it out loud) And speaking of Wilson's Law, he is the one who suggests we need four planet earth's to sustain the current global consumption habits if the rest of the world models the idea of the good life after guess who?

Not exact matches

By 2035, the IEA estimates that world coal consumption needs to fall by 30 percent from current levels, while global oil usage will have to drop by 12 percent.
Reformulation policies may also legitimise current levels of consumption of ultra-processed products in high - income countries and increased levels of consumption in emerging markets in the global South.
Israeli supplier Hinoman points to consumer research, which found that global protein consumption will reach 943 million metric tons (MMT) by 2054, growing at an 8.6 % CAGR from the current 473 MMT.
... It is becoming clear that the roots of the problem we face today are in the current patterns of global production and consumption, which are not sustainable.
If global oil consumption continues to rise at the current rate of 1.3 per cent per year, the planet's proven oil reserves of 1.332 trillion barrels are expected to run out in 2041.
That is more than 100 times the current global seafood consumption.
On its current course, global energy consumption would be 40 percent higher in 2030 than it is today.
Throughout Lost Planet 3, there are a number of pretty on - the - nose corollaries drawn between current fears of global warming and fossil fuel consumption and the game's background story of the Earth's slowly collapsing civilization.
With humanity's ecological footprint of 2.7 global hectares (gha) per person means to say that to sustain the current population on Earth of 7 billion people would take 18.9 billion gha (2.7 gha x 7 billion people) which is higher than the 13.4 billion global hectares (gha) of biologically productive land and water on Earth, a fact that indicates that already exceeded the regenerative capacity of the planet in the average level of current world consumption.
Facts and anecdotes examine the historic, scientific, economic, political, cultural, and literary aspects of coal, as well as the current debates about energy consumption, developing nations, and global warming.
Known for enigmatic works dealing with the «production, distribution, and consumption of imagery dealing with current global affairs,» the Irish artist returns to Lora Reynolds Gallery for his fourth solo exhibition with the gallery since 2007.
The Weather Makers will present three large - scale video works alongside a new print series, weaving together myth and metaphor with scientific research and new digital technologies, The exhibition asks the viewer to consider what the future might look like if we continue on our current trajectory of planetary pillaging and consumption, and why we have allowed ourselves to arrive at such a moment of global environmental crisis.
We emphasize the importance of considering methane dynamics at all scales, especially its production and consumption and the role microorganisms play in both these processes, to our understanding of current and future global methane emissions.
If the current strong growth of plastics usage continues as expected, the plastics sector will account for 20 % of total oil consumption and 15 % of the global annual carbon budget by 2050.
[29] At the current global total energy consumption of 15 terawatt, [30] there is enough coal to provide the entire planet with all of its energy for 57 years.
Unfortunately, the current global rate of consumption of wild seafood as a whole is nowhere near sustainable.
The Kigali Amendment, which enters into force on January 1, 2019 mandates a global phase - down of HFCs to about 15 per cent of current levels of consumption.
What's more, under current global agricultural activity, nitrogen fertilisation is already responsible for 1.5 percent of global energy consumption, being in itself an indirect CO2 source.
The EIA projects that by 2030, global power demand will increase to 17 trillion watts from the current consumption of 12.5 trillion watts, or an increase of about 36 %.
Advertising pieces created by the collective challenge issues such as pollution, transportation, global warming, excessive consumption, waste disposal in cities, and anything that is unsustainable in the current
Advertising pieces created by the collective challenge issues such as pollution, transportation, global warming, excessive consumption, waste disposal in cities, and anything that is unsustainable in the current status quo.
«In 2014, the global consumption of coal, oil and natural gas reached 8.2 billion tons, 33.6 billion barrels and 3.5 trillion cubic meters respectively, which can sustain [the world] for 110, 53 and 54 years if the current exploration intensity still maintains,» Liu said.
Two scenarios of energy demand are explored, one holding per capita consumption at current levels, the second raising the global average in the year 2100 to the current U.S. level.
Consumption patterns and associated per capita shares of resource use and pollution differ enormously, and using a consumption - based calculation rather than a national territorial production - based approach demonstrates even further the extent of global economic and environmental inequality: about 50 % of the world's people live on less than $ 3 per day, 75 % on less than $ 8.50, and 90 % on less than $ 23 (US$ at current purchasing powConsumption patterns and associated per capita shares of resource use and pollution differ enormously, and using a consumption - based calculation rather than a national territorial production - based approach demonstrates even further the extent of global economic and environmental inequality: about 50 % of the world's people live on less than $ 3 per day, 75 % on less than $ 8.50, and 90 % on less than $ 23 (US$ at current purchasing powconsumption - based calculation rather than a national territorial production - based approach demonstrates even further the extent of global economic and environmental inequality: about 50 % of the world's people live on less than $ 3 per day, 75 % on less than $ 8.50, and 90 % on less than $ 23 (US$ at current purchasing power parity).
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