POLLUTION AND CONSERVATION OF THE AUSTRALIAN COASTLINE

1971 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Reg C. Sprigg ◽  
S. McEwin

Coastal pollution, particulaly in estuaries, has already reached serious proportion in some areas of Australia. Public health, fish farming (principally oyster culture), fishery nursery areas, bird rookeries and subtidal faunal and floral communities are endangered. Pesticide levels, algal overgrowths, depleted oxygen levels and rising water temperatures may constitute lethal pollution.The dumping of industrial wastes and sewerage effluents, the construction of restricting barrages, and uncontrolled tourism, spear fishing, excessive shell collecting, careless operation of all-terrain vehicles and other damaging influences are spreading destruction or modifying natural balances in an ever expanding range of coastal environments.Oil pollution, principally by refinery discharges and the cleaning of oil tankers at sea by less responsible operators, often under cover of "flags of convenience", is intensified by the increasing incidence of tanker mishaps at sea. The dangers of accidental oil well blow-outs on the Great Barrier Reef, should drilling be resumed, have been grossly exaggerated by educated people who should have more concern for the facts. In fact many advantages accrue by the research facilities offered by the offshore operations. Such potential dangers recede to insignificance by comparison with scientists' claims as to the depredation of the Reef by the "Crown of Thorns" starfish, about which comparatively little is being done in Australia, and the damage to sensitive life chains from chlorinated hydrocarbons and fertilisers entering the sea via rivers.Mining operations do cause ecological damage or modification in the coastal perimiters, despite reclamation and artificial beautification schemes. The immediate economic benefits, however, must be properly balanced in relation to the overall community needs.Responsible scientific opinion, based on factual data, rather than extremist emotionalism, will continue to strengthen public consciousness, and will continue to encourage mining and oil companies to expand their own conservation programmes and to support C.S.I.R.O. and governmental and university-based research generally. Such public companies are already leaders in the fight against pollution, and employ increasing numbers of research biologists and related scientists in these endeavours. In the ultimate analysis, the public itself must be educated to be prepared to pay more for protection of its coastal inheritance, and to insist that Government Administrative services are streamlined to handle the problems on a national scale.The need for a co-ordinated inter-governmental and Australia-wide authority charged with the responsibility of zoning the coast in order of priority, with provision for wild life protection, public recreational needs and industrial complexes, is of primary importance.Government and Industry must unite in an all-out effort to arrest coastal deterioration and to speed the biological and ecological mapping of the coastal zone.Geosurveys of Australia Pty. Limited — AdelaidePriorities for coastal use and biological "bench marks" must be drawn up as a basis for monitoring and protecting the estuaries and other areas where population and industrial and recreational activities concentrate.

Author(s):  
Han-Ping Chen ◽  
Xian-Hua Wang ◽  
Shi-Hong Zhang ◽  
De-Chang Liu ◽  
Yu-Hua Lai ◽  
...  

In China, there are a large number of pulverized coal-fired industrial boilers, whose steam capacities are usually relatively small. These boilers can burn only high-grade coal and have low combustion efficiency. Furthermore, the combustion emissions, such as SO2 and NOx, pollute the environment severely. Therefore it is very important and urgent to adopt economically efficient and environmentally friendly technologies to retrofit these boilers. At the same time, there are many industrial wastes, such as bagasse, wood waste, rubbish, petroleum coke and so on, need burning disposal in China. Fluidized bed combustion technology is a kind of clear combustion technology, which has many advantages, such as excellence fuel flexibility, high combustion efficiency, low pollutant emission and good turndown capability etc. So, adopting fluidized bed combustion technology, retrofitting pulverized coal-fired boiler into fluidized bed boiler can realize pure burning various wastes or co-firing with coal, which should have great economic benefits and social benefits. And the application prospect of the method is also extensive. The State Key Laboratory of Coal Combustion has successfully retrofitted a 25t/h pulverized coal-fired boiler into circulating fluidized bed boiler with in-bed tubes and downward exhaust cyclone. The retrofitted boiler can burn mixture of coal and bagasse and the steam capacity reaches 35t/h. This paper presents the retrofitting measures and the operation status of the boiler after retrofitting.


2010 ◽  
Vol 139-141 ◽  
pp. 1064-1067
Author(s):  
Dian Xin Li ◽  
Hong Lin Zhao ◽  
Xian Long Liu ◽  
Shan Jun Zheng ◽  
Dai Geng ◽  
...  

According to the demand of exploiting the poor-thin oil layer in Daqing oilfield, Y422 retrievable fracture bridge plug is designed. Match usage of this bridge plug and other instruments can fracture multiple oil reservoirs with one-trip string, which is characterized by simple technology and safety operation. This bridge plug has realistic significance and practical value for improving oilfield economic benefits and provides an extensive application prospect. After setting process, the slips brace the bridge plug whose performance have a directly influence on the oil well productivity and production safety. In order to make sure that the bridge plug slips can meet the anchoring requirement, the actual working state of the slips system was analyzed by using finite element software, and the stress distribution rules were obtained. The results provide theoretical basis for optimizing slip structure and improving working reliability.


1979 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Wepster

When planning the replacement of an existing shore-based radar advice chain, which may have admirably served the port area under consideration for the past fifteen or twenty years, a number of basic elements have to be reviewed. The review and the ensuing process of analysis should be steps towards the adoption of a basic philosophy for the eventual development of a replacement system; this is necessary to judge requirements in relation to the many possible solutions, ranging from a simple shore-based radar advice service to sophisticated vessel traffic management systems. Elements for consideration include:(i) The area to be served, present and future.(ii) The traffic pattern, present and future.(iii) The technology available or under development.(iv) The other operational and administrative services available to shipping.(v) The quality of manning and manning scales.(vi) The economics of the shipping industry.(vii) The cost of the new system.(viii) The distribution of this cost over shipping and the community in general.(ix) Legal aspects.Besides these factual considerations and their analysis we should develop a philosophy regarding the aims of the system, which could be an improvement in port operation efficiency, in traffic safety, or in vessel turn-around time. The realization of these aims will probably result in economic benefits both for the port and for shipping and these will have to be weighed when investigating the distribution of system cost over shipping and the community in general.


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 1155-1162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgia Yfantidou ◽  
Eleni Spyridopoulou ◽  
Charilaos Kouthouris ◽  
Panagiota Balaska ◽  
Michela Matarazzo ◽  
...  

‘Green tourism’ is defined as tourism that enhances local cultural elements, which are operating under the control of local communities, providing employment and maintaining economic benefits within the local communities. In fact, many times the above definition is poorly utilized, since there are times when the economic benefits dim from local communities. Tourism industry uses the term as a message to tourists on energy saving, avoiding coastal pollution and so on. Sometimes, the same tourist businesses are accused of using the term or labelling ‘green’ primarily for marketing purposes. Although it is a fact that tourism industry is starting to respond to the changing values of tourists regarding environmental issues, however, the purpose of this research is to infer if there is a future for sustainable tourism development concerning the enterprises that provide sport tourism in Greece.


Author(s):  
Aviner Augusto Silva Manoel ◽  
Marcelo Botelho da Costa Moraes ◽  
David Ferreira Lopes Santos ◽  
Gabriel Pereira Pündrich

Evidence is mixed regarding the economic benefits achieved by companies hiring large firms to audit their financial statements. The studies approaching this theme concentrate mostly on public companies in developed markets, while the effect on private firms in emerging markets is still an open question. This research explores this gap by analyzing whether private firms in the Brazilian sugarcane industry audited by a Big 4 have a lower cost of debt than those audited by a non-Big 4. For that, a unique, hand-collected, dataset was used. This paper contributes to the literature by providing evidence of the role of audit institutions in an environment lacking studies on private firms’ financial reports, especially in emerging economies. The empirical analysis does not indicate that the cost of debt is negatively influenced by the verification of financial statements by a high-quality auditor. Banks and credit unions, as the primary funding sources of the industry, condition the cost of debt reduction to the levels of tangibility, leverage, and profitability. We also contribute to the literature by demonstrating that lenders may have other soft information sources, obtained through banking relationship, which may substitute higher-quality auditor. The results hold after robustness checks and endogeneity concerns.


Author(s):  
Curtis Wettstein

As of November 2007, 174 parties had ratified the Kyoto protocol signifying a large part of the solution to one of the worlds primary environmental problems; carbon dioxide emissions. Although the United States refused to sign the protocol, their neighbours in Canada were eager to address the issue and sign. However with oil being a major Canadian export, carbon dioxide emission reduction was arguably improbable and unprofitable. With the pressure of reducing carbon dioxide emissions an imminent, carbon sequestration may be the symbiotic solution in satisfying Kyoto, saving the environment and even increasing profitability. Carbon sequestration is the process where carbon dioxide is injected into an oil well in order to increase recovery. With tertiary oil recoveries driving much of the oil business, cheap and efficient recovery methods are invaluable. Presently there is a Canadian operation in Wayburn, Saskatchewan which employs the technique. In addition, Texas and Scandinavian oil companies are using Carbon dioxide injection. If carbon sequestration increases oil recovery it has to be the preferred method. By purchasing carbon dioxide from external sources and recycling their own, companies can reduce emissions while increasing profits. Finally it may be profitable to save the environment. 


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huimin Li

ABSTRACT With plenty of latest discoveries witnessed from East Africa, the petroleum atlas reshaping is expected where some new faces (e.g. Mozambique, Kenya, Tanzania, etc.) may play emergent roles besides traditional oil countries in Africa. Due to general lack of infrastructure construction and capital investment, it still need some time for large-scale commercial production and the involvement of international oil companies is indispensable in the process. Dramatic price drop has tremendously stricken both governments and international oil companies (IOC) in oil-producing countries since 2014. The effectiveness in which governments and IOCs adjust to this reality will determine the extent and the pace of future development of these countries’ oil sectors. Most IOCs were struggling to cut capital expenditure and control operating cost to survive, and how to maintain and attract investment is regarded as huge challenges by many governments in the downward scenario. Apart from resource factors, petroleum fiscal terms are one of the key factors in the investment decision for IOCs. The attractiveness of fiscal contracts has a fundamental effect on profitability of petroleum projects, and thus an important indicator for evaluating investment feasibility in the country. The paper gives an overview on fiscal transformation in most Africa oil countries, some of them were trying to increase government share in oil profits to support social expenditures, and others have provided fiscal incentives to absorb further investment in the oil sector. It shows that fiscal policies in the countries where national economy relies more on oil revenues are less stable during the past decade. Some upstream projects in Nigeria are illustrated to show the impacts of different contract terms on economic benefits. Thus with new government's coming into power, most IOCs are holding back further investment and expecting negotiation with the authorities for confirmation on fiscal terms applied in their assets to avoid potential contractual risks, like PIB, Side letter, etc. The implications regarding petroleum regime are summarized based on the experience from Nigeria for emerging countries in East Africa, relatively stable fiscal policy with some incentives to encourage exploration activities would be helpful to petroleum industry. Lastly, investment suggestions are presented with priorities to promote business development in the area.


1988 ◽  
Vol 6 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 323-328
Author(s):  
Hani A. Hussain

Kuwait, in nationalising our production of oil, formed the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC) to operate as an integrated oil company with satelite specialised companies. Since its formation in 1980, KPC, like other suppliers, has had to cope with soft markets, low prices and the consequent reduced revenues and limitation on development. KPC's goals have been to both stabilise and maximise revenues and diversify its source. This has been facilitated through the use of the expertise in the public companies under its control. As a result KPC has invested US $4.5 billion in upgrading projects, acquired technology through purchasing Santa Fe International and entered downstream marketing successfully in Europe.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (7) ◽  
pp. 39
Author(s):  
Lars Skjelbreia

Because of the tremendous increase in offshore activities, a great effort has been made on obtaining information on wave forces on structural members. Several oil companies have invested large sums of money in the design and construction of full-scale systems for measuring the wave forces. The equipment used for measuring the forces have been single cantilevers or segmented piles designed to make discrete measurements along the pile. For instance, during the last five years, The California Company and California Research Corporation (subsidiaries of Standard Oil Company of California) operated an installation in the Gulf of Mexico with four segmented piles of different diameters. The wave forces were measured by three-foot high force dynamometers located at seven different elevations along the length of each test pile. Each dynamometer was constructed from a section of the cylindrical pile which was attached to a system of flexures on the inside. So far the wave forces have been measured on cylindrical piles varying in diameter from one to four feet and in water depths varying from 30 to 50 feet. As the pile diameter and water depth increase, however, the measurements of wave forces by use of a cantilever or a segmented pile become very difficult and expensive. Therefore, a need exists for investigating other means for measuring the wave forces on a pile. This paper will describe the design and operation of a force meter that may be clamped to an existing pile. In Spring 1960, California Research Corporation installed equipment incorporating eight of the clamp-on meters on an oil well drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico. The water depth at the location is 100 feet, and two years of operation are planned.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-72
Author(s):  
John Karanikas ◽  
Guillermo Pastor ◽  
Scott Penny

Downhole electric heating has historically been unreliable or limited to short, often vertical, well sections. Technology improvements over the past several years now allow for reliable, long length, relatively high-powered, downhole electric heating suitable for extended-reach horizontal wells. The application of this downhole electric heating technology in a horizontal cold-producing heavy oil well in Alberta, Canada is presented in this paper. The field case demonstrates the benefits and efficacy of applying downhole electric heating, especially if it is applied early in the production life of the well. Early production data showed 4X-6X higher oil rates from the heated well than from a cold-producing benchmark well in the same reservoir. In fact, after a few weeks of operation, it was no longer possible to operate the benchmark well in pure cold-production mode as it watered out, whereas the heated well has been producing for twenty (20) months without any increase in water rate. The energy ratio, defined as the heating value of the incremental produced oil to the injected heat, is over 20.0, resulting in a carbon-dioxide footprint of less than 40 kgCO2/bbl, which is lower than the greenhouse gas intensity of the average crude oil consumed in the US. A numerical simulation model that includes reactions that account for the foamy nature of the produced oil and the downhole injection of heat, has been developed and calibrated against field data.  The model can be used to prescribe the range of optimal reservoir and fluid properties to select the most promising targets (fields, wells) for downhole electric heating as a production optimization method. The same model can also be used during the execution of the project to explore optimal operating conditions and operating procedures. Downhole electric heating in long horizontal wells is now a commercially available technology that can be reliably applied as a production optimization recovery scheme in heavy oil reservoirs. Understanding the optimum reservoir conditions where the application of downhole electric heating maximizes economic benefits will assist in identifying areas of opportunity to meaningfully increase reserves and production in heavy oil reservoirs around the world.


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