Search: in
Renewable resource
Renewable resource in Encyclopedia Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Videos     Books     Software     DVDs  
       
Encyclopedia results for Renewable resource
Renewable resource Email this to a friend      Renewable resource

Renewable resource





Encyclopedia results for Renewable resource

  1. Renewable resource

    Power Plant in Iceland is an example of renewable energy. Renewable energy sources A natural resource is a renewable resource if it is replaced by natural processes and if replenished with the passage of time. Renewable resources are parts of our natural environment and form our eco system . In 1962 ... VII, Nov. 2007, p.  125 DEFAULTSORT Renewable Resource Category Renewable resources cy Adnodd ... States, Paul Weiss defined Renewable Resources as The total range of living organisms providing man with food, fibers, drugs, etc... . ref Renewable Ressources, a report to the committee on natural resources by Paul Weiss chairman of renewable ressources study, 1962, National Academy of Science, National Research Council, Washington D.C., USA. ref Renewable resources are endangered by industrial ... , winds , geothermal , biomass and other natural elements are renewable resources of energy now called renewable energies . Gasoline , coal , natural gas , Diesel fuel diesel , minerals like copper, and other commodities derived from fossil fuel s are Non renewable resource non renewable . Unlike fossil fuels, coal, and oil, renewable resource can have a sustainable yield because it can decrease the amount of emission of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Renewable energy Image Windpark Galicia.jpg thumb left 275px A wind farm in Spain . main Renewable energy This section ... common resource. Hydropower appeared centuries ago with the first use of a power turbine ... , etc. is also a renewable source of energy. Similarly, Vegetable fats and oils oils from plants and seeds can be used as a substitute for non renewable diesel. Methane is also considered as a renewable source of energy. Renewable materials See bioplastics bioasphalt Agricultural products Techniques .... Biomass Biomass comes from renewable organic materials such as resides from agriculture like ... Water see Water resources Water can be considered a renewable material also non renewable when carefully ...   more details



  1. Non-renewable resource

    finite and non renewable resource on a human time scale. A non renewable resource is a natural resource ... sustainably or metal s which can be Recycling recycled are considered renewable resource s. ref http www.icax.co.uk on site renewable energy.html On site renewable energy options ref Fossil fuel ... industry. Renewable resources See Renewable resource Renewable energy Natural resource s, called renewable resources, are replaced by natural processes and forces of the natural environment ... . ref Economic models In economics, a non renewable resource is defined as a good where greater consumption ... model of non renewable resource management by Harold Hotelling . It shows that efficient exploitation of a nonrenewable and nonaugmentable resource would, under otherwise stable conditions, lead to a resource depletion depletion of the resource. The rule states that this would lead to a net price ... Non Renew Resources.html Non Renewable Resources at NASA.gov http www.sourcewatch.org index.php?title Foclear Foclear energy at SourceWatch http solarpowernotes.com non renewable energy what is non renewable energies.html List of Non Renewable energy sources DEFAULTSORT Non Renewable Resource Category ..., the main energy sources used by humans are non renewable as they are cheap to produce. Radioactive ... publisher World Nuclear Association accessdate 2011 02 28 ref The uranium resource is used to create ..., and can harnessed any number of cycles. Soil, water, forests, plants, and animals are all renewable ... on renewable resources. Renewable resources such as the movement of water hydropower , tidal ... infinite and cannot be depleted, unlike their non renewable counterparts, which are likely to run ... on Solar and Renewable Energy, Inorg. Chem. 44, 6799 2007 . ref ref P. V. Kamat, Meeting the Clean Energy ... of a mineral resource should increase over time. He argued that the spot price is always determined ... of welfare in an economy that uses non renewable source. See also Portal Energy Clean ...   more details



  1. Resource

    factors require resource allocation through resource management . There are two types of resources renewable and non renewable. Value of a resource The purely economic value of a resource is controlled ... cannot be recycled. Conditionally Renewable Resources Conditionally renewable resources are often classified as a third kind of resource, or as a subtype of renewable resources. They are dependent ...Other uses resource disambiguation A resource is any physical or virtual entity of limited availability ... things that cannot be measured in money. Natural resource s like forest s, mountains etc. are considered .... See also Infrastructure Types of resources Natural resources Main Natural resource Natural resources ... it is actually drilled out and put into use, it remains a potential resource. Stock are the materials ..., where use has not yet been started and are saved for future use. Actual resource s are those ... resource, such as wood processing depends upon the technology available and the cost involved. That part of the actual resource that can be developed profitably with available technology is called a reserve. On the basis of renewability, natural resources can be categorized into Renewable Resources Renewable resources are those that can be replenished or reproduced easily. Some of them, like ... consumption. Many renewable resources can be depleted by human use, but may also be replenished, thus ... http www.commondreams.org view 2009 06 26 5 ref Non renewable Resources Non renewable resources are formed ... their rate of formation is extremely slow, they cannot be replenished once they are resource depletion ... and everlasting destruction of the resource. Important examples are agricultural areas, fish and other animals, forests, healthy water and soil, cultivated and natural landscapes. Contitionally renewable ... getting and estimating resource requirements people Getting and Estimating Resource Requirements ... but cannot be grasped or contained. Resource use and sustainable development Many resources ...   more details



  1. Renewable fuels

    Renewable fuels are fuel s produced from renewable resources. Examples include biofuels eg. Vegetable oil used as fuel , ethanol , methanol from biomass, or biodiesel and Hydrogen fuel when produced with renewable processes . This is in contrast to non renewable resource non renewable fuels such as natural gas , Liquified petroleum gas LPG propane , petroleum and other fossil fuels and nuclear energy . Renewable fuels can include fuels that are synthesized from renewable energy sources, such as wind and solar. Renewable fuels have gained in popularity due to their sustainability , Carbon neutral low contributions to the carbon cycle , and in some cases lower amounts of greenhouse gas es. The geo ... to ramp up production. Motivations for renewable fuel development Hubbert s Hubbert peak theory peak oil theory suggests that petroleum is a finite resource that is rapidly depleting. Of the worldwide ... markedly, destabilizing economies worldwide. Consequently, renewable fuel drivers include high ... 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel be used in the marketplace by 2022. ref http www.nacsonline.com NACS Government MotorFuels Pages RenewableFuels.aspx Issue Update Renewable Fuels Retailer ... of energy. Renewable fuels are therefore becoming attractive to many governments, who are beginning ... needed date September 2007 Although many different renewable fuels can be derived from cellulosic ... gas H sub 2 sub as an energy carrier. Broadly speaking, the production of renewable hydrogen fuel can ... name nrelH2production National Renewable Energy Laboratory 2003 Research Review http www.nrel.gov ... require electrolysis of water. When this process draws its power from renewable energy sources like wind turbines or photovoltaic cells , the production requires little consumption of non renewable resources. Hydrogen fuel, when produced by renewable sources of energy like wind or solar power, is a renewable ... 2 http www.environsolutionsltd.com Environ Solutions Ltd http www.globalrfa.org Global Renewable ...   more details



  1. Renewable energy

    President Barack Obama speaks at the DeSoto Next Generation Solar Energy Center , in the USA . Renewable energy sources Renewable energy is energy which comes from natural resource s such as sunlight , wind , rain , tidal energy tides , and geothermal energy geothermal heat , which are Renewable resource renewable naturally replenished . In 2008, about 19 of global final energy consumption came ... Brazil has one of the largest renewable energy programs in the world, involving production of ethanol ... Ethanol fuel is also widely available in the USA. While many renewable energy projects are large scale, renewable technologies are also suited to rural and remote areas, where energy is often crucial ... frame.html Renewable energy technologies , p. 221. ref Globally, an estimated 3 million households ... support, are driving increasing renewable energy legislation, incentives and renewable energy commercialization ... Energy Investment 2007 Analysis of Trends and Issues in the Financing of Renewable Energy and Energy ... renewable energy sources. Source REN21 ref name REN21 2009 http www.ren21.net pdf RE GSR 2009 Update.pdf Renewables Global Status Report 2009 Update PDF . ref Renewable energy flows involve natural ... Renew main2003.pdf Renewable energy... into the mainstream p. 9. ref quote Renewable energy is derived ... and hydrogen derived from renewable resources. Renewable energy replaces conventional fuels in four ... REN21 GSR 2010 full.pdf Renewables 2010 Global Status Report p. 15. ref Power generation . Renewable energy provides 18 percent of total electricity generation worldwide. Renewable power generators ... rapidly. ref name ren53 Transport fuels . Renewable biofuel s have contributed to a significant decline ... 5 percent of world gasoline production. ref name ren53 Mainstream forms of renewable energy ref ..., and designing spaces that naturally circulate air. Biomass Biomass plant material is a renewable ... pump water into the earth, while other holes pump hot water out. The heat resource consists ...   more details



  1. Renewable heat

    TOC right Renewable heat is an application of renewable energy and it refers to the renewable generation of heat, rather than electrical power e.g. replacing a fossil fuel boiler using concentrating solar ... 11 and 12 URL accessed May, 2008 ref Renewable electric power is becoming cheap and convenient enough to place it, in many cases, within reach of the average consumer. By contrast, the market for renewable ... accessible market is still in its early stages. Leading renewable heat technologies Solar heating ... system, either conventional or renewable. Geothermal heating File Hot Spring.jpg thumb right Hot ... energy is an enormous, underused heat and power resource that is clean emits little or no greenhouse ... title Geothermal Basics Overview publisher Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy ... intensive, heat pumps are economical to run and can be powered by renewable electricity. Two common ... 15px vertical align top High Efficiency ASHP air at 20  C ref name CREN The Canadian Renewable ... a day. Renewable natural gas Renewable natural gas is defined as gas obtained from biomass which is upgraded ... Gas Distribution System ref According to the Energy research Centre of the Netherlands, renewable natural ... eliminated through distribution via the existing gas grid. Energy efficiency Renewable heat goes hand in hand with energy efficiency. Indeed renewable heating projects depend heavily for their success ... design Mitigation of global warming Natural building Passive house Passive solar Renewable energy Renewable energy development Seasonal thermal store Solar Air Heat Solar combisystem Solar hot ..., 2005 study on http www.dti.gov.uk renewables policy pdfs heatreportfinal.pdf Renewable Heat http www.icax.co.uk renewable heat.html Renewable Heat combining asphalt solar collectors, thermal banks ... download http www.alternative heating.com Information and videos about non conventional and renewable ... Category Heating Category Low energy building Category Residential heating Category Renewable energy ...   more details



  1. Renewable security

    Renewable Security was a concept that evolved after the repeated hacks of analogue TV encryption systems in the late 1980s. Simply stated, rather than completely replacing a hacked TV encryption system, only part of it would have to be replaced to make it secure again. The decoders at that time often contained all of the conditional access control data in a microcontroller . This data consisted generally of the decoder s identity, the subscriber s identity number and subscription data. When the decoder was hacked, the whole system was effectively compromised as other subscriber identity data could be substituted and the hackers had control. This security model also more commonly known as the Embedded Secure Processor model as the secure processor, the microcontroller, was embedded in the decoder itself. The systems manufacturers countered with the Detachable Secure Processor model. In this security model, the decoder itself would not be the critical part of the system. The subscriber identity data and subscription details would be stored in a smartcard the Detachable Secure Processor. Any compromise of the smartcard could then be countered by issuing a new, more secure, smartcard to subscribers. Renewable Security is good in theory. It provides hackers with a moving target rather than a stationary one. In the VideoCrypt system, the initial expectation was that the smartcards would be replaced every six months thus making the emergence of a pirate smartcard less likely. In reality, changing or upgrading the smartcards on a widely used TV Encryption system can be expensive and is done as infrequently as possible. References John McCormac. European Scrambling Systems 5 The Black Book, Waterford University Press, 1996, ISBN 1 873556 22 5. broadcast encryption Category Cryptographic protocols ...   more details



  1. Renewable Polyethylene

    Original research date March 2008 Main Bioplastics Polyethylene Biopolyethylene or also known as renewable polyethylene is made out of Ethanol , which becomes Ethylene after a dehydration process. It can be made from various feedstocks including sugar cane, sugar beet and wheat grain. ref http www.nnfcc.co.uk metadot index.pl?id 10220 isa Category op show. Life Cycle Assessment Workbooks for a Selection of Major Renewable Chemicals ref The final product Polyethylene is identical to Naphta or Gas based Polyethylene, therefore maintaining the physical properties for conversion into plastics products and also maintains its recycling properties. World s first announced ethanol based chemical pole, totally integrated from sugarcane to polyethylene, was recently announced by The Dow Chemical Company, in conjunction with Crystalsev, a large Sugar and Ethanol producer in Brazil. ref http www.dow.com commitments studies sugar.htm Dow and Crystalsev Announce Plans to Make Polyethylene from Sugar Cane in Brazil ref The pole is said to be projected to produce 770 million pounds per year of renewable LLDPE linear low density polyethylene , will begin construction in 2008, and is slated to start production in 2011. The amount of Ethanol needed to make 1 metric ton of polyethylene is roughly 2 metric tons, as dehydration takes half of the weight in water, from the sugar cane based ethanol, before converting into ethylene C2 . One of the main environmental benefits of this project will be the sequestration of roughly 2 kg of CO2 per kg of polyethylene produced, which comes from the CO2 absorbed by the sugar cane while growing, minus the CO2 emitted through the production process. Over 1.5 billion pounds of CO2 will be annually removed from the atmosphere, which is equivalent to the fossil emission of 1,400,000 Brazilian citizens according to the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center in 2004 ref http www.dow.com PublishedLiterature dh 0191 0901b80380191026.pdf?filepath news pdfs ...   more details



  1. Resource planning

    Resource planning may refer to Enterprise resource planning ERP Manufacturing resource planning MRP and MRPII Distribution Resource Planning DRP Human resources HR disambig ...   more details



  1. Resource curse

    The resource curse refers to the paradox that countries and regions with an abundance of natural resource s, specifically point source non renewable resources like mineral s and fuel s, tend to have less ... economic sectors caused by appreciation of the real exchange rate as resource revenues enter an economy , volatility of revenues from the natural resource sector due to exposure to global commodity ... activities . Resource curse thesis quote Ten years from now, twenty years from now, you will see oil ... than a blessing began to emerge in the 1980s. In this light, the term resource curse thesis was first ... Richard M. year 1993 title Sustaining Development in Mineral Economies The Resource Curse Thesis location ..., have shown a link between natural resource abundance and poor economic growth . ref citation title NBER Working Paper 5398 Natural resource abundance and economic growth first1 Jeffrey D last1 Sachs ... 2009 06 29 ref This disconnect between natural resource wealth and economic growth can be seen ... effects that are similar to the resource curse. ref citation url http www.econ.upf.edu docs papers .... First, resource curse effects can undermine the quality of governance and economic performances, ref cite journal last Norman first C. S. title Rule of Law and the Resource Curse journal Environmental and Resource Economics volume 43 issue 2 pages 183 207 doi 10.1007 s10640 008 9231 y ref thereby increasing the vulnerability of countries to conflicts the resource curse argument . Second, conflicts ... the resource war argument . Third, access to resource revenues by belligerents can prolong conflicts the conflict resource argument . ref Philippe Le Billon 2006 , Fuelling War Natural Resources and Armed ..., World Bank. ref Taxation see also Rentier state In many economies that are not resource dependent ... money. In addition, those benefiting from mineral resource wealth may perceive an effective and watchful ... are dominated by resource extraction industries tend to be more repressive, corrupt and badly ...   more details



  1. Resource depletion

    Other uses Depletion disambiguation Resource depletion is an economics economic term referring to the exhaustion of raw materials within a region. Natural resource Resources are commonly divided between renewable resource s and non renewable resource s. See also Mineral resource classification . Use of either of these forms of resources beyond their rate of replacement is considered to be resource depletion. Resource depletion is most commonly used in reference to the farming , fishing , mining , and fossil fuel s. ref http www.libraryindex.com pages 103 Depletion Conservation Natural Resources.html ref Causes of resource depletion Over consumption excessive or unnecessary use of resources Non equitable distribution of resources Overpopulation Slash and burn agricultural practices, currently occurring in many developing countries Technology Technological and industry industrial development Erosion Irrigation Mining for oil and minerals Aquifier depletion Forestry Pollution or contamination of resources Minerals and oil Materials removed from the Earth are needed to provide humans with food, clothing, and housing and to continually upgrade the standard of living. Some of the materials needed are renewable resources, such as agricultural and forestry products, while others are nonrenewable, such as minerals . The USGS reported in Materials Flow and Sustainability 1998 that the number of renewable resources is decreasing, meanwhile there is an increasing demand for nonrenewable resources. Since 1900 the use of construction materials such as stone, sand, and gravel, has soared. The large scale exploitation of minerals began in the Industrial Revolution around 1760 in England and has grown rapidly ever since. Today s economy is largely based on fossil fuels, minerals and oil ... scale. The US government has produced the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Resource ... Resource Depletion Category Resource economics Category Environmental issues ...   more details



  1. Resource intensity

    Resource intensity is a measure of the resource s e.g. water , energy , materials needed for the production, processing and disposal of a unit of good economics good or service economics service , or for the completion of a process or activity it is therefore a measure of the Efficient energy use efficiency of resource use. It is often expressed as the quantity of resource embodied in unit cost e.g. litres of water per 1 spent on product. In national economic and sustainability accounting it can be calculated as units of resource expended per unit of GDP . When applied to a single person it is expressed as the resource use of that person per unit of consumption.Relatively high resource intensities indicate a high price or environmental cost of converting resource into GDP low resource intensity indicates a lower price or environmental cost of converting resource into GDP. ref Lorentzen, J. ed 2008. Resource intensity, knowledge and development insights from Africa and South America. HSRC Press, South Africa. ISBN 100 7969 2213 6 ISBN 13978 07969 2213 7 ref Resource productivity and resource intensity are key concepts used in sustainability measurement as they measure attempts to decouple the connection between resource use and environmental degradation . Their strength is that they can be used as a metric for both economic and environmental cost. Although these concepts are two ..., on the one hand, the efficiency of resource production as outcome per unit of resource use resource productivity and, on the other hand, the efficiency of resource consumption as resource use per unit outcome resource intensity . The sustainability objective is to maximize resource productivity while minimizing resource intensity. See also col begin col 3 Bioeconomics Econophysics Energy and Environment ... Economics Industrial ecology Population dynamics Resource productivity col 3 Sustainability accounting ... Sustainability Category Natural resources Category Resource economics Category Environmental economics ...   more details



  1. WS-Resource

    WS Resource is a family of specifications that enable and standardise interfaces for web services to give the appearance of statefulness this is accomplished using WS Addressing endpoints where a service QName is bound together with a resource identifier and resources , special web services that provide access to and manipulation of remotely stored data structures . Components WS ResourceProperties The state of a WS Resource is stored in a resource properties document in XML format. The WS ResourceProperties specification defines the properties of a resource as well as mechanisms for querying and modifying resource properties. WS ServiceGroup WS ResourceLifetime WS BaseFaults See also http www.oasis open.org committees tc home.php?wg abbrev wsrf OASIS WS Resource Framework technical committee compu network stub Category Web service specifications Resource ...   more details



  1. Resource Hacker

    Infobox software name Resource Hacker logo File Resource hacker icon.png screenshot File Resource Hacker.PNG 300px caption Resource Hacker running in Windows 7 developer Angus Johnson released Start date 1999 12 03 latest release version 3.4.0.79 latest release date Start date and age 2002 03 24 latest preview version 3.5.2.84 latest preview date Start date and age 2009 11 19 programming language Object Pascal operating system Microsoft Windows size 2.08 megabyte MB after installation language English language English , Chinese language Chinese , Japanese language Japanese status Discontinued genre Resource Windows Resource extractor license Proprietary website http www.angusj.com resourcehacker Resource Hacker also known as ResHacker or ResHack is a freeware free Resource Windows resource extraction utility developed by Angus Johnson for Microsoft Windows Windows . It is used to modify program or operating system elements such as icons by extracting resources from Portable Executable executable program .exe , program extension .dll , and resource .res files. The utility is widely used. Citation needed date December 2009 Johnson has stated that he has no plans to continue development . ref name no longer developed http www.angusj.com resourcehacker Section Resource Hacker is no longer being developed ref On November 19, 2009, version 3.5.2 was released as a beta. This build added ... www.wilsonc.demon.co.uk d10resourceeditor.htm XN Resource Editor ref name no longer developed as a open ... code. References Reflist External links http angusj.com resourcehacker Resource Hacker homepage http www.askvg.com tutorial all about resource hacker in a brief tutorial Resource Hacker Guide http rammichael.com resource hacker fx Resource Hacker FX the improved Resource Hacker Windows software stub Category Windows software ja Resource Hacker ko pl Resource Hacker pt Resource Hacker ru Resource Hacker ...   more details



  1. Resource productivity

    Resource productivity is the quantity of good or service outcome that is obtained through the expenditure of unit resource. ref Hargroves, K. and Smith, M.H. 2005. The Natural Advantage of Nations Business Opportunities, Innovation and Governance in the 21st Century . Earthscan, London. ref ref Hawken, P., Lovins, A. and Lovins, L.H. 1999. Natural Capitalism Creating the Next Industrial Revolution . Earthscan, London. ref This can be expressed in monetary terms as the monetary yield per unit resource. For example, when applied to crop irrigation it is the yield of crop obtained through use of a given volume of irrigation water, the crop per drop , which could also be expressed as monetary return from product per use of unit irrigation water. br Resource productivity and resource intensity are key concepts used in sustainability measurement as they attempt to decouple the direct connection between resource use and environmental degradation . Their strength is that they can be used as a metric for both economic and environmental cost. Although these concepts are two sides of the same coin, in practice they involve very different approaches and can be viewed as reflecting, on the one hand, the efficiency of resource production as outcome per unit of resource use resource productivity and, on the other hand, the efficiency of resource consumption as resource use per unit outcome resource intensity . The sustainability objective is to maximize resource productivity while minimizing resource intensity. See also col begin col 3 Bioeconomics Econophysics Energy and Environment Environmental economics Energy Accounting col 3 Ecodynamics Ecological Economics Industrial ecology Population dynamics Thermoeconomics col 3 Sustainability accounting Resource intensity Sustainable development Systems ecology col end References reflist Category Sustainability Category Natural resources Category Resource economics Category Environmental economics Category Thermodynamics Category Energy ...   more details



  1. Resource leak

    In computer science , a resource leak is a particular type of resource consumption by a computer program where the program cannot release resources it has acquired. This condition is normally the result of a bug in a program. Typical resource leaks include memory leak and handle leak . Examples of resources available in limited numbers to the operating system include internet socket s, file handle s etc. See also Resource starvation Category Computational resources Computer stub he ...   more details



  1. Resource management

    For the New Zealand law Resource Management Act 1991 In organizational studies , resource management is the efficient and effective deployment for an organization s resources when they are needed. Such resources may include financial resources, inventory, human skills, production resources, or information technology IT . In the realm of project management, processes, techniques and philosophies as to the best ... vs. cross functional resource allocation as well as processes espoused by organizations like ... to project management. Resource management is a key element to activity resource estimating and project human resource management. Both are essential components of a comprehensive project management ... of project management , there are list of resource management software resource management software tools available that automate and assist the process of resource allocation to projects and portfolio resource visibility including supply and demand of resources. HR Human Resource Management This is the science ... required by the work. Corporate Resource Management Process Large organizations usually have a defined corporate resource management process which mainly guarantees that resources are never over ... Management ref Techniques One resource management technique is resource leveling . It aims at smoothing ... as demanded. A dimension of resource development is included in resource management by which ... that is demanded, at a lower investment than disposing of the current resource and replacing it with another that has the demanded capability. In Habitat conservation conservation , resource management ... of management are Air Air pollution air resource management, soil conservation , forestry , wildlife management and water resource management. The broad term for this type of resource management is natural resource management NRM . See also Environmental management Factor 10 Industrial symbiosis List of resource management software Resource allocation References reflist DEFAULTSORT Resource ...   more details



  1. Resource Adapter

    A Resource Adapter is an archive file format defined in the Java EE Connector Architecture JCA specification. A Resource Adapter aRchive RAR file is the valid format for deployment of resource adapters on application servers. Note that although the file extension of RAR is used to signify Resource Adapter aRchive , this use of the file extension RAR should not be confused with the RAR file extension that indicates use of RAR compression. The Resource Adapter RAR file is actually a JAR file, therefore also a ZIP file. Java EE RAR files may also be called connectors. See also JAR file format WAR Sun file format EAR file format Deployment Descriptor External links Category Java platform compu prog stub ru Resource Adapter ...   more details



  1. Resource nationalism

    Resource nationalism is a term used to describe the tendency of people and governments to assert control over natural resources located on their territory. The approach of peak oil has led many governments to take ownership and or control of fossil fuel reservoirs, for strategic as well as economic reasons, although the term is also applied to other resources, such as metals. The term is often used in conjunction with the decreased influence this leaves multinational corporation s with. External links http www.cfr.org publication 13989 return of resource nationalism.html The return of resource nationalism , Council on Foreign Relations http corporateforeignpolicy.com category resource nationalism Resource nationalism , Corporate Foreign Policy http peakoil.com modules.php?name News&file article&sid 50734 The threat of resource nationalism , Peak Oil News Category Nationalism Category Resources Econ term stub ...   more details



  1. Resource (disambiguation)

    wiktionary resource A Resource is any physical or virtual entity of limited availability. It may also refer to Resource economics , commodities and human resources used in the production of goods and services, including Natural resource , a commodity that is valuable in its relatively natural form Human resources HR or human capital, valuable human work power Resource project management , economic resources used in planning of tasks Resource computer science , including Resource Web , anything identified by a Uniform Resource Identifier which can be found in a certain location Resource Macintosh , data associated with a Mac OS file Resource Windows , data embedded in EXE and DLL files Resource Java , application data Resourcing refers to funding and the management of resources, like in Management , where resourcing encompasses the deployment and manipulation of resources. Project governance Project Governance , where the enabler role, through resourcing of projects, is to harness and manage also the provision of resources. Human resources Recruitment Recruitment of Human Resources , where employee recruitment forms a major part of an organization s overall resourcing strategies. Workforce planning Closing the gaps in Workforce Planning , where resourcing forms one of the eight key areas that is needed to focus on. Supplier relationship management Resourcing Supplier Relationship Management , where resourcing is one of the skills required for procurement to implement successful SRM. disambig bs Resurs vor ca Jaciment da Ressource es Yacimiento fr Ressource ko it Risorsa krc ja pl Zasoby ru simple Resource uk vi T i nguy n ...   more details



  1. Human resource

    human resource may stand for another name for an employee human resources , another name for labor Human resource management , the strategic approach to management of human resources Human Resources audio drama Human Resources audio drama , a Nick the Doctor Who audio drama The Human Resource , a drum and bass compilation album presented by Dieselboy Human Resources film Human Resources film or Ressources humaines , a French film from 1999 directed by Laurent Cantet disambig ...   more details



  1. Resource Kit

    Refimprove date April 2010 Cleanup link rot date April 2010 Resource Kit is a term used by Microsoft ... of that product. Resource kits offer supplementary resources such as technical guidance, compatibility ... of the Resource Kits are as a large book or box set of books which come with CD ROM s , both of which have been supplemented in some cases such as the Resource Kits for Windows NT Server versions 3.51 and 4.0 and Windows 2000 Server. The text of the Resource Kit books are also available with versions ..., and others to interoperability tools like Windows versions of some Unix commands and shells. The Resource ... third party software like various versions of Crystal Reports. Typically, Microsoft releases resource .... Resource kits have also been released for Internet Explorer , BackOffice and other software. Those ... confused with being a Resource Kit for Unix. The Microsoft Office resource kits are also relevant to the versions of these office suites for the MacIntosh. The Resource Kit tools mainly help .... The resource kits are also geared towards power users and contain other tools such as extra commands ... Korn shell are available with many of the operating system Resource Kits, including those for both the Windows 95 98 and Windows NT 2000 streams of operating systems. Windows Resource Kits Windows Resource Kit was introduced with Windows 3.0 in 1991 and has since been released for every Windows version, except for Windows Me , Windows CE and Windows 98 Second Edition . A Resource kit for MS DOS 6.22 was released in 1992. Resource Kits were also not produced for Microsoft s two non Windows ... as for the Windows 3.11, Windows 95 and Windows 98 Resource Kits. The Windows 95 and Windows 98 Resource ... Windows installation CD ROM discs. Resource Kit tools can generally be downloaded from the Microsoft ... and include the Resource Kit tools and utilities, some of which may be exclusive. The Windows NT 4.0 Resource Kits Workstation and Server contained a particularly large number of tools and utilities ...   more details



  1. Resource contention

    In computer science , resource contention is a conflict over access to a shared resource such as random access memory , disk storage , cache memory , internal bus computing bus ses or external network devices. Resolving resource contention problems is one of the basic functions of operating system s. Various low level mechanisms can be used to aid this, including lock computer science lock s, semaphore programming semaphore s, mutex es and queue data structure queue s. Failure to properly resolve resource contention problems may result in a number of problems, including deadlock , livelock and thrashing computer science thrashing . See also Bus contention Resource allocation Collision avoidance networking Category Computational resources Compsci stub es Contenci n de recursos ...   more details



  1. Resource (Java)

    In the Java programming language Java programming language a resource is a piece of data that can be accessed by the code of an Application software application . An application can access its resources through Uniform Resource Locator s, like Resource Web web resources , but the resources are usually contained within the JAR file format JAR file s of the application. A Java resource bundle resource bundle is a set of key and value pairs, stored as a resource, that is commonly used to allow the Software localization localization of an application. For this purpose different resource bundles with a common set of keys are used to store translations for the messages and user interface texts of an application. References cite book last Campione first Mary coauthors Kathy Walrath, Alison Huml title The Java Tutorial Continued url http java.sun.com docs books tutorial books continued index.html accessdate April 2006 year 2004 edition 6 print. publisher Addison Wesley isbn 0 201 48558 3 chapter Internationalization chapterurl http java.sun.com docs books tutorial i18n TOC.html Category Java programming language ...   more details



  1. Resource allocation

    Resource allocation is used to assign the available resource s in an economic way. It is part of resource management . In project management , resource allocation is the scheduling of activities and the resources required by those activities while taking into consideration both the resource availability and the project time. ref http www.pmhut.com pmo and project management dictionary PMO and Project Management Dictionary ref Strategic planning unreferenced section date August 2010 In strategic planning , resource allocation is a plan for using available Natural resource resources , for example human resources , especially in the near term, to achieve goals for the future. It is the process of allocating resources among the various project s or business units. The plan has two parts Firstly, there is the basic allocation decision and secondly there are contingency mechanisms. The basic allocation decision is the choice of which items to fund in the plan, and what level of funding it should receive, and which to leave unfunded the resources are allocated to some items, not to others. There are two contingency mechanisms. There is a priority ranking of items excluded from the plan, showing which items to fund if more resources should become available and there is a priority ranking of some items included in the plan, showing which items should be sacrificed if total funding must be reduced. Resource Leveling Main Resource leveling The main objective is to smooth resources requirements ... and capabilities of electronic computers. Algorithms Resource allocation may be decided by using ... ref One class of resource allocation algorithms is the auction class, whereby applicants bid for the best resource s according to their balance of money , as in a online auction business model ... zflavio article 1043948 Tycoon A Distributed Market based Resource Allocation System ref an auction ... Project management Earned value management DEFAULTSORT Resource Allocation Category Resources Category ...   more details




Articles 1 - 25 of 44483          Next


Search   in  
Search for Renewable resource in Tutorials
Search for Renewable resource in Encyclopedia
Search for Renewable resource in Videos
Search for Renewable resource in Books
Search for Renewable resource in Software
Search for Renewable resource in DVDs
Search for Renewable resource in Store


Advertisement




Renewable resource in Encyclopedia
Renewable resource top Renewable resource

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2011-2013 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement