5 resultados para crop economist

em Aston University Research Archive


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This paper reviews nitrogen (N) cycle of effluent-irrigated energy crop plantations, starting from wastewater treatment to thermo-chemical conversion processes. In wastewater, N compounds contribute to eutrophication and toxicity in water cycle. Removal of N via vegetative filters and specifically in short-rotation energy plantations, is a relatively new approach to managing nitrogenous effluents. Though combustion of energy crops is in principle carbon neutral, in practice, N content may contribute to NOx emissions with significant global warming potential. Intermediate pyrolysis produces advanced fuels while reducing such emissions. By operating at intermediate temperature (500°C), it retains most N in char as pyrrolic-N, pyridinic-N, quaternary-N and amines. In addition, biochar provides long-term sequestration of carbon in soils.

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This research investigates the contribution that Geographic Information Systems (GIS) can make to the land suitability process used to determine the effects of a climate change scenario. The research is intended to redress the severe under representation of Developing countries within the literature examining the impacts of climatic change upon crop productivity. The methodology adopts some of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimates for regional climate variations, based upon General Circulation Model predictions (GCMs) and applies them to a baseline climate for Bangladesh. Utilising the United Nations Food & Agricultural Organisation's Agro-ecological Zones land suitability methodology and crop yield model, the effects of the scenario upon agricultural productivity on 14 crops are determined. A Geographic Information System (IDRISI) is adopted in order to facilitate the methodology, in conjunction with a specially designed spreadsheet, used to determine the yield and suitability rating for each crop. A simple optimisation routine using the GIS is incorporated to provide an indication of the 'maximum theoretical' yield available to the country, should the most calorifically significant crops be cultivated on each land unit both before and after the climate change scenario. This routine will provide an estimate of the theoretical population supporting capacity of the country, both now and in the future, to assist with planning strategies and research. The research evaluates the utility of this alternative GIS based methodology for the land evaluation process and determines the relative changes in crop yields that may result from changes in temperature, photosynthesis and flooding hazard frequency. In summary, the combination of a GIS and a spreadsheet was successful, the yield prediction model indicates that the application of the climate change scenario will have a deleterious effect upon the yields of the study crops. Any yield reductions will have severe implications for agricultural practices. The optimisation routine suggests that the 'theoretical maximum' population supporting capacity is well in excess of current and future population figures. If this agricultural potential could be realised however, it may provide some amelioration from the effects of climate change.

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Several cationic initiator systems were developed and used to polymerise oxetane with two oxonium ion initiator systems being investigated in depth. The first initiator system was generated by the elimination of a chloride group from a chloro methyl ethyl ether. Adding a carbonyl co-catalyst to a carbocationic centre generated the second initiator system. It was found that the anion used to stabilise the initiator was critical to the initial rate of polymerisation of oxetane with hexafluoroantimonate resulting in the fastest polymerisations. Both initiator systems could be used at varying monomer to initiator concentrations to control the molecular number average, Mn, of the resultant polymer. Both initiator systems showed living characteristics and were used to polymerise further monomers and generate higher molecular weight material and block copolymers. Oxetane and 3,3-dimethyl oxetane can both be polymerised using either oxonium ion initiator system in a variety of DCM or DCM/1,4-dioxane solvent mixtures. The level of 1,4-dioxane does have an impact on the initial rate of polymerisation with higher levels resulting in lower initial rates of polymerisation but do tend to result in higher polydispersities. The level of oligomer formation is also reduced as the level of 1,4-dioxane is increased. 3,3-bis-bromomethyl oxetane was also polymerised but a large amount of hyperbranching was seen at the bromide site resulting in a difficult to solvate polymer system. Multifunctional initiator systems were also generated using the halide elimination reactions with some success being achieved with 1,3,5-tris-bromomethyl-2,4,6-tris-methyl-benzene derived initiator system. This offered some control over the molecular number average of the resultant polymer system.

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This article compares the tactic of trashing genetically modified crops in activist campaigns in Britain and France. In Britain, most crop trashing was carried out covertly, while in France most activists undertook open, public actions. In seeking an explanation for this, the article shows that the analysis of political opportunities, dominant in comparative studies of social movements, can only take us so far. While it helps explain the occurrence of direct action, it is much less useful in explaining the tactical differences between each country. It is argued that a fuller explanation requires an understanding of how action was shaped by different activist traditions. In France, action was staged as a demonstration of serious, responsible, collective Republican citizenship; in the United Kingdom, activists combined a sceptical view of legality developing from anarchist individualism with an explicitly non-threatening, playful, ethos. The article concludes that a focus on activist traditions can provide an effective bridge between structural and cultural approaches to understanding the determinants of social movement action.