Sentences with phrase «per ton output»

It was a nippy 4 degrees in the morning and the track was damp so the car was lively on its small sports tyres, its healthy 360bhp per ton output breaking traction under small throttle openings.

Not exact matches

One, man - hours per ton of output were quickly cut in half, from 70 to the upper 30s; two, sales per employee of $ 21,000 in 1983, just before Foster took over, soared to $ 109,000 in 1991; three, he instantly dismissed 15 of Chromalloy's 38 salaried staff.
As of 2007, the Juhnde bioenergy village had reduced its carbon dioxide output by 3,300 tons per year, or by 60 percent per capita.
We have only a limited amount of time and resources to confront climate change problem, and we should not be using them to refine old polluting technologies that will always remain carbon - based even if the output per ton of GHGs is higher.
I'm a GW agnostic and saw this posed on a Sciam blog... If its correct that the estimated co2 output by humans is around 22.5 billion tons a year, these volcanic erruptions outputted that and more PER DAY.
The proposed Carmichael mine, owned by the Indian company Adani Enterprises, would produce 60 million tons of coal per year, and 128 million tons of carbon dioxide per year — approximately four times the annual greenhouse gas output of New Zealand.
«Coal eats nuclear's lunch over 20 to 30 years unless the carbon output of fossil - fuel - burning power plants is taxed at something like $ 100 per ton,» Holdren says.
Our company was founded in 1988 by Mr. Robert E. Murray, our Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, who mortgaged everything he owned to the purchase a single continuous mining operation, The Ohio Valley Coal Company's Powhatan No. 6 Mine, which at the time had an annual output of approximately 1.2 million tons per year and was being closed.
For example, a recent U.S. federal interagency assessment recommended a value of $ 25 per ton for 2015 (in 2010 $) with the tax rate rising at a rate of about 2 to 3 percent per year in real terms (roughly reflecting growth in world output potentially affected by climate change).
Patrick 259 — Sweden started out with $ 100 per ton of CO2 ($ 27 per ton of C) and has now raised it to $ 150, with significant effects on Swedish CO2 output.
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