Sentences with phrase «technological feasibility»

"Technological feasibility" refers to the ability or possibility of developing and implementing a technology or innovation successfully. It means that a particular technology can be created, used, and maintained effectively to achieve its intended purpose. Full definition
This has been the missing link despite the economic benefits and technological feasibility evident for the past two decades.
ITER's mission is to demonstrate the scientific and technological feasibility of fusion energy for peaceful purposes.
Every single one of their games, regardless of its setting, is packed to the gills with increasing levels of nuanced detail only limited by technological feasibility.
To accelerate the process, Sandia wants to identify computer designs that could take advantage of new device technologies and demonstrate key components or steps in fabrication that would lower the risk for industry by demonstrating technological feasibility.
The new report The Substitution of Labor: From technological feasibility to other factors influencing job automation is the fifth report from the three - year research project, The Internet and its Direct and Indirect Effects on Innovation and the Swedish Economy under the leadership of Professor Robin Teigland.
Considering that both the well - below 2 °C and the within 2 °C scenarios involve the same information companies need to set targets and involve similar technological feasibilities, companies should take action now on raising ambition beyond the 2 °C minimum.
ITER is a large international fusion experiment aimed at demonstrating the scientific and technological feasibility of fusion energy.
The technological feasibility of various Arctic whitening ideas is very much up in the air.
They did not concern themselves with the economic, political and technological feasibility of each, nor the ethical questions.
For example, Prof Ottmar Edenhofer, chief economist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and co-chair of the IPCC's Working Group Three report on mitigation, selected four papers from the last 20 years on the economics of climate change costs versus risks, recent emissions trends, the technological feasibility of strong emissions reductions and the nature of international climate cooperation.
Targets differ across states because of each state's unique mix of electricity - generation resources — and also because of technological feasibilities, costs, and emissions reduction potentials, all of which vary across the country.
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