4,891 research outputs found

    Air pollutants and greenhouse gases -- Options and benefits from co-control

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    S-adenosyl-l-methionine: (S) -7,8,13, 14-tetrahydroberberine--n-methyltransferase, a branch point enzyme in the biosynthesis of benzophenanthridine and protopine alkaloids.

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    The enzyme which transfers the CH3-group of S-adenosylmethionine to the nitrogen atom of (S)-tetrahydroberberine and (S)-stylopine is found to occur in a number of plant cell cultures originating from species containing alkaloids; it is located at an important branch point in isoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis

    Cost Functions for Controlling SO2 Emissions in Europe

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    This paper marks an important step in the development of the Regional Acidification INformation and Simulation (RAINS) model. One of the major goals of the project since its beginning four years ago, has been to get RAINS used in policy analysis. To that end the model should include variables that are very crucial in the eyes of the decision makers. The cost of reducing air pollutant emissions certainly is such an important policy relevant variable. The authors have successfully developed a uniform approach for establishing cost-of-control functions for emissions of sulfur dioxide in virtually all European countries. This uniformity is particularly important for comparing the cost-effectiveness of various scenarios for controlling acid deposition in Europe. Currently the assumptions and the numbers in this paper are under review by experts in many of the European countries. The cost-of-control functions allow the evaluation of targeted deposition levels at a variety of locations in Europe. This will be the topic of a subsequent paper. In the near future we will also develop similar control function for the emissions of nitrogen oxides and will eventually combine the functions into one cost-of-control function for acidifying emissions

    Decomposing Air Pollutant Emissions in Asia: Determinants and Projections

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    High levels of air pollution pose an urgent social and public health challenge in many Asian regions. This study evaluates the role of key factors that determined the changes in emission levels in China, India and Japan over the past 25 years. While emissions of air pollutants have been declining in Japan since the 1990s, China and India have experienced a rapid growth in pollution levels in recent years. Around 2005, control measures for sulfur emissions started to deliver expected reductions in China, followed by cuts in nitrogen oxides ten years later. Despite recent policy interventions, growing emission trends in India persist. A decomposition analysis of emission-driving factors indicates that emission levels would have been at least two-times higher without the improvements in energy intensity and efficiency, combined with end-of-pipe measures. Due to the continuous reliance on fossil fuels, the abatement effect of a cleaner fuel mix was in most cases significantly smaller than other factors. A reassessment of emission projections developed in the past suggests a decisive impact of energy and environmental policies. It is expected that targeted legislative instruments will play a dominant role in achieving future air-quality goals in Asia

    Effect of acute severe hypoxia on peripheral fatigue and endurance capacity in healthy humans

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    Effect of acute severe hypoxia on peripheral fatigue and endurance capacity in healthy humans. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 292: R598–R606, 2007. First published September 7, 2006; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00269.2006.—We hypothesized that severe hypoxia limits exercise performance via decreased contractility of limb locomotor muscles. Nine male subjects [mean SE maximum O2 uptake (V˙ O2 max) 56.5 2.7 ml kg 1 min 1] cycled at 90% V˙ O2 max to exhaustion in normoxia [NORM-EXH; inspired O2 fraction (FIO2) 0.21, arterial O2 saturation (SpO2) 93 1%] and hypoxia (HYPOX-EXH; FIO2 0.13, SpO2 76 1%). The subjects also exercised in normoxia for a time equal to that achieved in hypoxia (NORM-CTRL; SpO2 96 1%). Quadriceps twitch force, in response to supramaximal single (nonpotentiated and potentiated 1 Hz) and paired magnetic stimuli of the femoral nerve (10–100 Hz), was assessed pre- and at 2.5, 35, and 70 min postexercise. Hypoxia exacerbated exercise-induced peripheral fatigue, as evidenced by a greater decrease in potentiated twitch force in HYPOX-EXH vs. NORM-CTRL ( 39 4 vs. 24 3%, P 0.01). Time to exhaustion was reduced by more than two-thirds in HYPOX-EXH vs. NORM-EXH (4.2 0.5 vs. 13.4 0.8 min, P 0.01); however, peripheral fatigue was not different in HYPOX-EXH vs. NORM-EXH ( 34 4 vs. 39 4%, P 0.05). Blood lactate concentration and perceptions of limb discomfort were higher throughout HYPOX-EXH vs. NORM-CTRL but were not different at end-exercise in HYPOX-EXH vs. NORM-EXH. We conclude that severe hypoxia exacerbates peripheral fatigue of limb locomotor muscles and that this effect may contribute, in part, to the early termination of exercise

    Cost-Effective Strategies for Reducing Nitrogen Deposition in Europe

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    This paper explores the potential cost savings which would result from a combined control of emissions of nitrogen oxides and ammonia for the cost-effective achievement of nitrogen deposition targets in Europe. Using the Regional Acidification INformation and Simulation (RAINS) model a framework has been constructed for a simultaneous optimization of NOx and NH3 emission reductions using nitrogen depositions from both pollutants as side constraints. The paper first demonstrates that the same nitrogen deposition resulting from the currently committed reductions of NOx emissions (without measures for NH3 emissions) can be achieved at only 55 percent of the costs if measures for ammonia reduction would also be applied. The analysis shows that no large scale substitutions of NO, reductions by ammonia measures occur. The cost savings mainly result from replacing the most expensive (and ineffective) NOx abatement at a few places in Europe with inexpensive ammonia control measures. Consequently, the total level of NOx emissions is hardly higher than in the reference case, but substantial NH3 reductions are implemented lowering total cost. The second case explores the potential contribution ammonia control can make for attaining the same nitrogen deposition levels resulting from the maximum application of NOx abatement technologies solely. In this case reductions of ammonia emissions can lower total abatement costs by 23 percent, basically by modified manure handling, stable adaptations for poultry and the control of industrial ammonia emissions

    Trading of Emission Reduction Commitments for Sulfur Dioxide in Europe

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    This paper analyzes the potential role of emission trading systems for non-uniformly dispersed air pollutants, for which the geographical location of emissions has a significant impact on the location and extent of environmental damage. The paper derives the necessary conditions for trading schemes to be cost-effective and introduces the concept of offset rates. Offset rates describe the amount of emissions one source has to decrease if another source increases its emissions by one unit. To explore the potential performance of alternative trading schemes a simulation framework based on' the IIASA-RAINS model has been developed. Simulation runs to achieve regionally specified maximum levels of sulfur deposition (target loads) in Europe show that trading may result in cost savings. The extent to which such cost savings are possible and whether the originally specified target deposition levels are exceeded, depends crucially on the pre-trade level of emissions, the availability of information on costs, and the behavior of the trading partners. Further analysis is necessary before drawing final conclusions
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