Sentences with phrase «peak production times»

«The ability to monitor the system arms the client with the knowledge of peak production times for electricity and therefore appliances can be timed to come on at these times, optimising performance,» explains Energywise director Berth Sheehy.
Even worse, it was during a peak production time for seasonal demand.

Not exact matches

At peak production, 300 people work here on up to five projects at a time.
Some experts in Russia assume that after peaking at some time after 2020, production is going to start declining rather fast — up to 10 percent a year.
In addition, we help our customers during times of peak production by performing much of the legwork to find new ingredients or sources.
Given time, at its peak, milk production may be as much as 900mL per day.
Second, German North Sea hydrocarbons output has always been minuscule in comparison to UK output: the former peaked in 2003 at around 40 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day (KBOED) and is currently running at around 26 KBOED, whereas the latter peaked in 1999 at 4.6 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (MMBOED), and is currently running at around 1.4 MMBOED (i.e. thirty five times more than Schleswig - Holstein production at its peak).
The timing of the 1998 peak suggests that curbs on industrial production were responsible, at least in part, for the decline, but the magnitude of the drop has baffled scientists because the best models had predicted a smaller decline.
Barres and his colleagues found that production of C1q — the immune protein they unexpectedly found in the brain — peaks at the same time that synapses are pruned.
This change in peak timing is largely the result of increased photochemical production from anthropogenic and biogenic precursors (Monks, 2000, Parrish et al., 2012, 2013).
Total coal production in the United States is varied over time, oscillating over the decades, up and down, except anthracite, which peaked around 1920.
Given their historical optimism, it was notable that in their World Energy Outlook of 2010 the International Energy Agency stated that the most likely scenario is that conventional crude oil production «never regains its all - time peak of 70 million barrels per day reached in 2006.»
THE PEAK OF OXYGEN CONSUMPTION AT THE TIME OF SPERM PENETRATION IS ASSOCIATED WITH AN INCREASE IN REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES PRODUCTION IN BOVINE ZYGOTES.
These changes that come about with treatment increase the capacity of the body to begin producing more of its own natural growth hormone, by allowing the person to begin exercising more and sleeping better (the two peak times of natural production); once the body is restored to optimal health, and the individual is taking care to follow a healthier way of living their body may be in a position for continued self - maintenance without any more treatment.
The same goes for exercise — that is the second peak time of natural production of GH; when the measure of growth hormone is where it should be, the body has an increased capacity for exercise and physical exertion, which increases more naturally grown growth hormone.
By 1971, Land Rover Defender production hit its all - time peak, at 56,000 cars, as the Series III model arrived.
Land Rover has taken the new (2014) Range Rover Sport to Pikes Peak and set a new record time for a production SUV at an average speed of almost 60mph.
For a dog with allergies to pollen, keeping them indoors during the morning and early evening (times of peak pollen production) will alleviate some of the problem.
Now we're in a time when experts debate whether the peak of production has been reached, or whether ever - higher prices will simply drive exploration ever more to the fringes for new sources — be they tar sands or under the Arctic Ocean seabed.
Incidentally, with the current fossil fuel reserves estimated to last for at least another 150 years, we certainly are not even close to reaching the same level of greenhouse gases any time soon, that existed when the production of biomass was at its peak.
Though economists and other eternal optimists have not yet figured that the supply of crude oil is a limited resource, a growing number of petroleum geologists speak about peak oil, a time when world oil production peaks, then starts downward, perhaps after sitting around a plateau for some unknown time period.
It has been particularly unfortunate for the U.S. that at the very time discussions of peak oil have turned serious, with the peak of oil production now in sight (or maybe already behind us), we elected two oil men to run our nation.
They are intended to maximise the energy output from the Hywind turbines by mitigating peaks and troughs in production, storing surpluses at times when the grid is at or near full capacity and unable to accept further injections of electricity.
Only this time, the peak isn't in production — it may be in consumption.
Lastly, in a grid with 100 % renewable power production, the generation capacity would need to be ten times larger than the peak load, and excess electricity would surpass the EU annual electricity consumption.
Depending on the rate structures and peak and off peak times of your utility some designers are now considering orientating solar panels more towards the west than the south to get more of the solar production to happen in peak times.
Peak natural gas and coal production do not arise for several decades (see a previous post), giving plenty of time to improve on the eventually inevitable nuclear designs if one doesn't like the present «best» iterations.
To a growing number of oil industry commentators this is because we have reached, or are just about to reach, peak oil — the point at which oil production hits an all time high then goes into terminal decline.
One is «dispatchable load,» i.e., power consumption that can be scheduled, drawing more energy in times of peak production and in some cases releasing clean power back to the grid during the valleys.
Tags energy security, Harry Broadman, Hubbert's Peak, Julian Simon, Kenneth Deffeyes, Market failure, New York Times, oil, oil discovery, oil production, peak oil, Wall Street Journal, William HPeak, Julian Simon, Kenneth Deffeyes, Market failure, New York Times, oil, oil discovery, oil production, peak oil, Wall Street Journal, William Hpeak oil, Wall Street Journal, William Hogan
Atmospheric GEM concentrations, reconstructed from Greenland firn air and the worldwide production of mercury, peak at roughly the same time during the 1970s (Fig. 2).
(237) Fred Moolten — The part I find interesting about the paper is the time estimate on the peak of coal production.
As I pointed out here, CAGR for CO2 emissions from coal, oil, natural gas, flaring, and cement production averaged 3.08 % for the period 2000 - 2010, peaking to 6 % in 2003 over 2002 (though there was no hysteria that time) and again in 2010 over 2009 (much unwarranted hysteria about a single year, even by professionals but perhaps overblown by the media as usual who may have been selective about who they quoted!).
Given their historical optimism, it was notable that in their World Energy Outlook of 2010 the International Energy Agency stated that the most likely scenario is that conventional crude oil production «never regains its all - time peak of 70 million barrels per day reached in 2006.»
Because the growth rate in production is expected to vary (generally ranging from 2 to 4 %), African gas production is projected to peak at roughly the same time (2035 — 2045) in all three cases before declining slowly thereafter.
The timing of peak production per capita varies among the three pairs of projections.
SB 338 attempts to address the infamous solar «duck curve,» a graph of power production that reveals the gap between peak demand times and the times when solar electricity is being produced.
At this time of high demand, gas - and coal - fired plants used to be able to achieve high returns but with solar power production also peaking around noon, conventional power plants lost this important advantage.
On the rare spring and summer days when bright sunshine comes with strong winds, pushing renewable power production to a peak, Germany can almost cover its entire electricity demand with green power, at least for a few hours at a time.
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