Fossil fuels will have to satisfy the world's
expanding need for energy.
Man's
expanding need for energy creates difficult economic, social and environmental problems.
Not exact matches
With Asia's rapidly growing
need for energy imports in the early 2000s, Canada hoped to reduce its almost 100 % reliance on the United States as an export market
for oil and natural gas by
expanding to Asia.
This is a belated recognition of the conclusions of a meeting of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences as long ago as 1980 that emphasised the worldwide
need for nuclear power to provide the
energy for an
expanding world.
The legislation would do five things: spur clean
energy businesses, help farmers diversify their products, retrain workers
for specific local manufacturer
needs, invest in infrastructure and
expand rural broadband access.
The work, published in Science, not only opens the door to
expand the use of one of the most efficient
energy sources on the planet, but also adds a key step in completing the nuclear fuel cycle — an advance, along with wind and solar, that could help power the world's
energy needs cleanly
for the future.
Needed: a strategy to promote resilience Compiling a list of suggestions, they push federal agencies to «make resilience a core aspect of all federal infrastructure and disaster - recovery funding» to strengthen affordable housing; ask
for federal leaders to
expand funding
for programs, such as the Low Income Home
Energy Assistance Program, so at - risk municipalities can develop disaster plans and assess their vulnerabilities; and boost economic stability by opposing cuts to the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, or SNAP, so families can afford to eat after a disaster.
I've already hinted that you
need carbs in your bulking diet to give you all the
energy you
need to be able to function normally as well as having the necessary fuel to workout and
for your body to grow and
expand.
The mayor noted that the
need for a substation arose due to the demand
for electric
energy service as the region continues to
expand.
Facing the intertwined challenges of
expanding energy access while limiting global warming, what the world
needs is an unlikely mix of urgency and patience, as I've been proposing
for awhile.
Awareness of this enduring disparity is a reminder of the
need to
expand access to reliable, affordable
energy for all, even as parties around the world pursue common ambitions to improve the environment and address the risks of climate change.
(Sec. 213) Amends the EPCA to: (1) revise the definition of «
energy conservation standard» to include energy efficiency for certain covered equipment, water efficiency for certain covered equipment, and both energy and water efficiency for certain equipment; (2) allow the adoption of consensus and alternative test procedures for purposes of the Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles; (3) require the Secretary to prescribe a new test method for televisions; (4) expand the list of criteria for prescribing new or amended energy conservation standards, including requiring Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
energy conservation standard» to include
energy efficiency for certain covered equipment, water efficiency for certain covered equipment, and both energy and water efficiency for certain equipment; (2) allow the adoption of consensus and alternative test procedures for purposes of the Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles; (3) require the Secretary to prescribe a new test method for televisions; (4) expand the list of criteria for prescribing new or amended energy conservation standards, including requiring Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
energy efficiency
for certain covered equipment, water efficiency
for certain covered equipment, and both
energy and water efficiency for certain equipment; (2) allow the adoption of consensus and alternative test procedures for purposes of the Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles; (3) require the Secretary to prescribe a new test method for televisions; (4) expand the list of criteria for prescribing new or amended energy conservation standards, including requiring Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
energy and water efficiency
for certain equipment; (2) allow the adoption of consensus and alternative test procedures
for purposes of the
Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles; (3) require the Secretary to prescribe a new test method for televisions; (4) expand the list of criteria for prescribing new or amended energy conservation standards, including requiring Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
Energy Conservation Program
for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles; (3) require the Secretary to prescribe a new test method
for televisions; (4)
expand the list of criteria
for prescribing new or amended
energy conservation standards, including requiring Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
energy conservation standards, including requiring
Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
Energy Guide labels to include the carbon output of each covered product; (5) require manufacturers of covered products to submit annual reports and information to DOE regarding compliance, economic impact, annual shipments, facility
energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal stan
energy and water use, and sales data that could support an assessment of the
need for regional standards; and (6) require state and local building codes to use appliance efficiency requirements that are no less stringent than those set by federal standards.
These flexibility
needs are rapidly
expanding as a result of numerous industry trends: (a) recognition by policymakers that renewable
energy resources are
needed to meet long - term emissions reductions goals; (b) customers» increasing desire to voluntarily procure renewable
energy or generate electricity on - site; and (c) substantial technological improvements that have driven down the cost of renewable resources to the point where, even before accounting
for tax incentives, they are the lowest - cost option
for new generating plants in some regions of the country.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin (Wisconsin), a progressive with a lot on the ball, noting that low
energy prices are driving significant gains
for the U.S. economy, questioned the trade - offs between
expanded LNG exports and the
needs of U.S. consumers and domestically based manufacturing.
«The Taskforce will also lead work into developing transmission infrastructure in Queensland's North - West to support a clean
energy hub, assess the
need for expanded interconnection between Queensland and other states, and investigate new hydro - electric generation sites,» said
energy minister Mark Bailey.
These articles paint oil and gas as the only reliable
energy source
for the future, describe the
need to
expand fossil fuel reserves, and ignore the possibility of a carbon - restricted future.
The IEA also praised Estonia's success in
expanding the share of renewable
energy, notably wind and biomass, but pointed to the
need for forward - looking and more stable renewable
energy policy to allow the country to go beyond EU - driven obligations.
October 24, 2014 Lisa Friedman, «Solving
Energy Poverty
Need Not Trash the Atmosphere,» October 24, 2014 Andrew Revkin, «Accounting for the Expanding Carbon Shadow from Coal - Burning Plants,» August 28, 2014 Fred Pearce, «World's poor need grid power, not just solar panels,» August 5, 2014 Roger Pielke, Jr. and Dan Sarewitz, «Climate Policy Robs the World's Poor of their Hopes,» February 26,
Need Not Trash the Atmosphere,» October 24, 2014 Andrew Revkin, «Accounting
for the
Expanding Carbon Shadow from Coal - Burning Plants,» August 28, 2014 Fred Pearce, «World's poor
need grid power, not just solar panels,» August 5, 2014 Roger Pielke, Jr. and Dan Sarewitz, «Climate Policy Robs the World's Poor of their Hopes,» February 26,
need grid power, not just solar panels,» August 5, 2014 Roger Pielke, Jr. and Dan Sarewitz, «Climate Policy Robs the World's Poor of their Hopes,» February 26, 2014
State and federal policies that facilitate transparent and timely project review, as well as set and maintain realistic deadlines
for pipeline approval, will do much to expedite construction and
expand infrastructure to enhance the delivery of affordable
energy that consumers and businesses
need.
«Not only will the redevelopment process create local jobs, but the
energy produced at the site will provide an affordable, dependable way
for the east San Francisco Bay Area to meet its
expanding power
needs for generations to come.»
For those that didn't hear the message over the past year: One major bottleneck in
expanding renewable
energy generation in the US is that electrical transmission capacity
needs to be
expanded and modernized.
But here's a piece of the conversation in which Gerard talks about the
need for policymakers and would - be policymakers to acknowledge the role of the ongoing U.S.
energy renaissance in supporting and
expanding individual Americans» prosperity and opportunity:
Developers stressed that
energy efficiency is key to scale blockchain technology
for ever -
expanding business
needs.