87 research outputs found

    Sustainable Case Study: Chevron Corporation

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    The Chevron Corporation is considered to be one of the five largest energy-producing companies in the world and they are trying to become a more sustainable company. To improve sustainability they are investing in local communities through health, education, and small business funds. They are researching and learning how they affect biodiversity, in ecosystems that they are drilling in. They are also finding ways to be more energy efficient and lower their emissions. Although there are many examples of these sustainable activities there are few concrete numbers that can be shown in order to show exactly how sustainable Chevron is

    Wisconsin Energy Corporation: Case Study Of Corporate Social Responsibility

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    Increasing by approximately 32% a year globally over the last five years, wind energy has proven to be a clean, abundant, and cost effective renewable source of energy. Wind energy is an important part of the strategy to replace fossil fuel electricity generation. Fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas currently generate over 70% of the power consumed in North America. The dramatic increase in the cost for fossil fuels and the growing pressure on the world's nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions have combined to position wind power as the world’s fastest growing new source of electricity generation. This case study discusses a major producer of America’s wind energy, Wisconsin Energy Corporation (WEC), and their strategies and commitments to alternative energy and a more sustainable future. The company’s “triple bottom line” including economic, social, and environmental benefits will also be evaluated

    Slaughterhouse Wastewater Treatment by Combined Chemical Coagulation and Electrocoagulation Process

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    Slaughterhouse wastewater contains various and high amounts of organic matter (e.g., proteins, blood, fat and lard). In order to produce an effluent suitable for stream discharge, chemical coagulation and electrocoagulation techniques have been particularly explored at the laboratory pilot scale for organic compounds removal from slaughterhouse effluent. The purpose of this work was to investigate the feasibility of treating cattle-slaughterhouse wastewater by combined chemical coagulation and electrocoagulation process to achieve the required standards. The influence of the operating variables such as coagulant dose, electrical potential and reaction time on the removal efficiencies of major pollutants was determined. The rate of removal of pollutants linearly increased with increasing doses of PACl and applied voltage. COD and BOD5 removal of more than 99% was obtained by adding 100 mg/L PACl and applied voltage 40 V. The experiments demonstrated the effectiveness of chemical and electrochemical techniques for the treatment of slaughterhouse wastewaters. Consequently, combined processes are inferred to be superior to electrocoagulation alone for the removal of both organic and inorganic compounds from cattle-slaughterhouse wastewater

    Comedy in Unfunny Times: News Parody and Carnival after 9/11

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    Comedy has a special role in helping societies manage crisis moments, and the U.S. media paid considerable attention to the proper role of comedy in public culture after the 9/11 tragedies. As has been well documented, many popular U.S. comic voices were paralyzed in trying to respond to 9/11 or disciplined by audiences when they did. Starting with these obstacles in mind, this essay analyzes early comic responses to 9/11, and particularly those of the print and online news parody The Onion, as an example of how “fake” news discourse could surmount the rhetorical chill that fell over public culture after the tragedies. By exposing the news as “mere” production and by setting an agenda for learning about Islamic culture and Middle East politics, The Onion avoided violating decorum and invited citizen participation. This kind of meta-discourse was crucial after 9/11, when shifting rules for decorum created controversy and as official voices in government and media honed frames and narratives for talking about the attacks

    The Effects of Uniforms, Sex and Race on Children\u27s Perceptions of Police Officers

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    Amoroso and Ware (1981) found that young children have a positive attitude toward the police, but that this attitude decreases with older children, especially among males. Reiser (1970) suggests that many people react negatively toward the police because of the influence of the police officer\u27s uniform. Frank and Gilovich\u27s (1988) research found that those individuals who wore black uniforms were perceived as being more aggressive, and actually performed in a more aggressive manner than those individuals who wore uniforms of a different color. Several researchers have found a positive white/ negative black bias among children (Bhana, 1977; Porter, 1971; Sparks-Davidson, Rahman, & Hildreth, 1982). The present study investigated children\u27s perceptions of police officers as a function of the uniforms that the police wear, the race of the police officers, and the children\u27s gender. The results from the present study found a more positive perception of the black police officer than the white officer (n \u3c .05), which is inconsistent with earlier research concerning color bias (Bhana, 1977; Porter, 1971; Sparks-Davidson et al., 1982). Contrary to past research (Amoroso & Ware, 1981), the present study also found that boys\u27 and girls\u27 perceptions of police officers are very similar. Results for the uniform condition approached conventional statistical significance (p = .09). Earlier studies found that citizens\u27 perceptions of police officers were positively biased toward the traditionally uniformed police officer (Mauro, 1984). The present study found a more positive perception of the plain clothes police officer

    Avaliação da floco-decantação de manta de lodo associada à decantação de alta taxa no tratamento de águas de consumo humano Evaluation of sludge blanket settler flocculator associated to high rate sedimentation applied on water treatment for human consumption

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    O presente trabalho objetiva avaliar a eficiência de uma unidade-piloto de floco-decantação de manta de lodo associada à decantação de alta taxa na remoção de turbidez, utilizando polímero catiônico como coagulante primário. Avaliaram-se três taxas de aplicação superficial, para águas de estudo apresentando turbidez de 3 a 100 uT e cor verdadeira praticamente nula. As dosagens de polímero foram definidas em ensaios de jar test. O desempenho da unidade-piloto mostrou-se plenamente satisfatório, para as três taxas avaliadas, com resultados coerentes aos obtidos em escala de bancada. Esta performance abre a perspectiva do emprego da tecnologia em escala real para sistemas de abastecimento público, mesmo para a potabilização de águas naturais de baixa turbidez.<br>This paper aims the efficiency evaluation, in pilot scale, of a sludge blanket flocculator associated to a high rate settler using a cationic polymer as the primary coagulant. Three surface loading rates and different synthetic waters, with variable turbidities (from 3 to 100 NTU), were evaluated. The polymer dosages applied on the pilot scale were set up after jar tests. This technology showed a good performance for all rates and the results for all synthetic waters were similar with those obtained in the bench scale. This performance provides a clear feasibility of its use in actual scale for water supply systems, even to treat natural waters with low turbidity
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