Any liability caused by or due to consequential event due to ionising, radiation or contamination by radioactivity from any nuclear fuel or from, any nuclear
waste from the combustion of nuclear fuel.
For any claim arising from damage to any property whatsoever or any loss or expenses whatsoever resulting or arising from or any consequential loss directly or indirectly caused by or contributed to by or arising from Ionising radiation or contamination by radioactivity from any nuclear
waste from the combustion fuel or the radioactive, toxic, explosive or other hazardous properties of any explosive nuclear assembly or nuclear component thereof.
Ioinising radiation or contamination by radioactivity from any nuclear
waste from the combustion of nuclear fuel OR
Loss or damage due to ionizing radiation or contamination by radioactivity from any nuclear fuel or from nuclear
waste from the combustion of nuclear fuel is excluded from the insurance plan.
Directly or indirectly caused by or contributed to by or arising from ionising radiation or contamination by radioactive substance from any nuclear fuel or from any nuclear
waste from the combustion of nuclear fuel.
Not exact matches
At the very least, Reinhardt hopes the planners will consider biogas, fuel material
from food
waste and wastewater treatment plants, for
combustion instead of the natural gas.
Fumes
from nitrogen - rich fertilizers and animal
waste combine in the air with
combustion emissions to form solid particles in the air.
The culprit: fumes
from nitrogen - rich fertilizers and animal
waste combine in the air with
combustion emissions to form solid particles, which constitute a major source of disease and death, according to the new study.
In addition, the extraction of coal,
from West Virginia to Wyoming, devastates the physical environment, and its processing and
combustion produce gigantic volumes of
waste.
Most of it stems
from construction or demolition sites, building renovations and conversions and
from packaging and crushed
waste whose pollutant content falls within the permitted guidelines for recycling or wood
combustion (OMW, 2005).
And I agree with Overandout, that for almost 40 years there have been plenty of us advocating gradual, sensible change away
from overconsumption,
waste, pollution and reliance on carbon
combustion.
In the same tone as the last post regarding atmospheric contaminants, have to wonder whether an era of widespread constant
combustion across the globe, and all the
waste heat
from that
combustion, would have any effect on the global mean temperature.
[7] Power plant efficiency can also be greatly improved by using «combined heat and power» systems that use
waste heat
from the
combustion process for space heating or industrial applications, [8] or by using a «combined cycle» that uses the
waste heat to power a steam turbine and make more electricity.
The Urban Heat Island Effect (UHI) is a phenomenon whereby the concentration of structures and
waste heat
from human activity (most notably air conditioners and internal
combustion engines) results in a slightly warmer envelope of air over urbanised areas when compared to surrounding rural areas.
How CHP works is by using the heat that would otherwise be
wasted in exhaust gases
from fossil
combustion systems, such as flue gases
from a coal - or biomass - fueled boiler or exhaust
from a gas turbine or reciprocating engine, to produce steam and / or hot water for various industrial or commercial needs.
In the U.S., a range of legislation and regulation at the federal and state levels governs miner safety, coal mine reclamation, coal plant siting, thermal pollution
from coal plant cooling, coal
combustion emissions, and disposal of coal
waste.
A lot of this pollution was «fugitive» emissions — leaks
from valves, flanges, tiny holes in pipes, and incomplete
combustion of
waste gasses in the plants» flares.
«(iii) in the case of the
combustion, pyrolization, or gasification of municipal solid
waste, a certification that each local government unit
from which such
waste originates operates, participates in the operation of, contracts for, or otherwise provides for, recycling services for its residents.
First, biological
wastes such as residues of crop products, trimmings
from harvested trees, and carbon dioxide emitted
from fuel wood or fossil fuel
combustion are all included within Ecological Footprint accounts.
-- The term «qualified
waste - to - energy» means energy
from the
combustion of municipal solid
waste or construction, demolition, or disaster debris, or
from the gasification or pyrolization of such
waste or debris and the
combustion of the resulting gas at the same facility, provided that --
Bioenergy includes the generation of heat or electricity
from either the
combustion of organic or
waste materials or their conversion to biofuels.
To prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency
from regulating coal
combustion byproducts as hazardous
waste under subtitle C of the Solid
Waste Disposal Act, and for other purposes.
-- The term «qualified
waste - to - energy» means energy
from the
combustion of post-recycled municipal solid
waste, or
from the gasification or pyrolization of such
waste and the
combustion of the resulting gas at the same facility, if the owner or operator of the facility generating electricity
from the energy provides to the Commission, on an annual basis --
Preheating
combustion air with
waste heat
from the plant will also increase efficiency, and some plants are considering schemes to use solar thermal collectors as air preheaters during daylight hours.
The Bill already includes an 18 % reduction in the budget of the EPA but the additional measures include a rider preventing the EPA
from issuing any regulation on greenhouse gases for the next year, a rider stopping the EPA
from bringing in proposed fuel - efficiency standards for all automobiles (which were approved by manufacturers) a refusal to label toxic ash spill left
from coal
combustion as hazardous
waste, a rider preventing uranium mining in the Grand Canyon and a prevention on stopping limits on mercury usage.
This can include transformative or innovative actions to reduce black carbon and methane emissions
from household energy, transportation, municipal solid
waste, the brick sector and other
combustion industries, agriculture and the oil and gas industry; or to replace hydrofluorocarbons used in cooling and refrigeration.
Examples of recoverable
waste heat include cooling circuits in and exhaust gases
from diverse sources such as steel mills, cement plants and
combustion engines.
Combined cycle: An electric generating technology in which electricity is produced
from otherwise lost
waste heat exiting
from one or more gas (
combustion) turbines.
WHEREAS, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) intends to propose federal regulations to govern the disposal of coal
combustion byproducts (CCB) under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA); WHEREAS, the EPA is considering changing the current regulatory status of CCBs
from a non-hazardous
waste under the...
• A rider that would prevent the EPA
from labeling the toxic ash left over
from coal
combustion as hazardous
waste — something that would no doubt alarm the people of Kingston, Tenn., buried by a coal - ash spill in 2008.
The table below shows data compiled by the International Energy Agency, which estimates carbon dioxide emissions
from the
combustion of coal, natural gas, oil and other fuels, including industrial
waste and non-renewable municipal
waste.
I recently wrote about a technology that aims to capture the
waste heat
from power plant and vehicle
combustion with the potential to power 11.4 million U.S. homes and small scale applications like heat exchangers in showers have become more popular.
39 environmental groups have drafted a letter asking the Obama administration to «reject a pending federal rule that will make it easier to dispose of coal
combustion waste from power plants in abandoned mines» and tighten rules regarding coal ash disposal.
Ionizing radiation or contamination by radioactivity
from any nuclear fuel or
from any nuclear
waste,
from combustion of nuclear fuel, the radioactive, toxic, explosive or other hazardous properties of any nuclear assembly or nuclear component of such assembly.
For example, «A mechanical engineer with a certification on
waste combustion from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.»