The results show that when measured by mass, the restored wetlands were, on average,
a small net source of carbon.
Not exact matches
I am a former hedge fund manager / analyst that is starting a service for
small institutions and high
net worth individuals whereby global value ideas from a variety of
sources (primarily other value managers, news, public filings, blogs, assorted research services) are «curated», vetted, and presented in summary form with pertinent financials real - time.
About 25 % of our
net worth is in real estate exposure, with nearly all of it in the Vanguard REIT (although recently invested a
small amount via Fundrise to try some direct crowd
sourcing).
The economic perspective is fairly straightforward, the government
nets about $ 20 billion (
source is from 2014, this number will likely be far less the coming year as Trump's tax bill more than doubled the exclusion amount from $ 5.49 million to $ 11.2 million) from a
small amount of people, so opposition by those directly affected is
small by comparison to, say, income tax.
I am a former hedge fund manager / analyst that is starting a service for
small institutions and high
net worth individuals whereby global value ideas from a variety of
sources (primarily other value managers, news, public filings, blogs, assorted research services) are «curated», vetted, and presented in summary form with pertinent financials real - time.
Moreover, the measure of
net worth used includes home equity, which can only ever be a partial
source of retirement income and only if we're willing to trade down to a
smaller home or take out a reverse mortgage.
So actually the local radiation field is much simpler that what you're trying to describe: in the transparent windows, it's just the emitted intensity from the
source (sun + ground), and in the opaque lines, it is nearly isotropic with the excitation temperature of the molecules close to the local kinetic temperature if collisions are numerous enough, with a
small anisotropy linked to the
net radiation flux.
A Critique of Brookings Institutution's Mark Muro and Devashree Saha: Rooftop Solar:
Net Metering Is A
Net Benefit [1] by Tom Tanton, E&E Legal's Director of Science and Technology Assessment Across the country, more and more electric utility customers are using rooftop solar panels and other
small - scale, on - site power
sources known as distributed generation (DG).
This would further confound attempts to assess their contribution to temperature change during intervals when their
net deviation from their baseline levels was large, although it would have less significance for the post-1950 decades when their
net contribution would be
small even as independent
sources of warming.
Because our excess heat is concentrated in what amounts to point
sources, and those point
sources are almost invariably located near to the temperature monitoring sites, you may want be a little kinder to Phillip and his opinion that waste heat accounts for a significant amount of our «warming» unless you have convincing evidence that the heat is dissipated so rapidly that its
net effect is
smaller than our ability to detect.
The Special Report on Renewable Energy
Sources and Climate Change Mitigation estimates the
net effect on yields to be
small worldwide at 2 °C, although regional changes are possible.
If you think that natural
sources of CO2 are adding more CO2 to the atmosphere than humans are, you need to toss out the Keeling curve and all similar measurements, because they show a
net annual increase
smaller than the known human contribution.
But interannual variation in the
net flux from natural
sources is
small in comparison to the magnitude of the flux from anthropogenic
sources.
The
net CO2 in the atmosphere is a
small portion of the massive natural
sources and sinks as well as anthropogenic contributions.
If the energy produced is not large, the
net return on the capital invested may be
small or the production cost of the resulting fuel may be large relative to other energy
sources.
These are all excellent guidelines for the creation of high - performance and
net - zero energyProducing as much energy on an annual basis as one consumes on site, usually with renewable energy
sources such as photovoltaics or
small - scale wind turbines.
Choosing this route provides an alternative
source of liquidity for the business, which may provide a safety
net for
smaller businesses engaged in a high growth phase where cash is scarce and margins are tight.