The OIL INDUSTRY includes the global processes of exploration‚ extraction‚ refining‚ transporting (often by oil tankers and pipelines)‚ and marketing petroleum products. The largest volume products of the industry are fuel oil and gasoline (petrol). Petroleum is also the raw material for many chemical products‚ including pharmaceuticals‚ solvents‚ fertilizers‚ pesticides‚ and plastics. The industry is usually divided into three major components: upstream‚ midstream and downstream. Midstream operations
Premium Petroleum
Ethics and the Oil Industry Todd Bosta Monday‚ November 8‚ 2010 Does anybody Care? As the US Economy continues to dive‚ unemployment persists at a level not seen since the Great Depression‚ and the US Federal Government sees fit to continually bailout big business‚ it escapes logic why the cost of oil once again‚ is on the rise. The US oil companies would have us believe it has to do with the Middle East oil producing nations cutting back on production‚ therefore raising
Premium Petroleum OPEC Price of petroleum
Palm oil is under increasing scrutiny in relation to its effects on the environment. Palm oil‚ produced from the oil palm‚ is a basic source of income for many of the world’s rural poor in South East Asia‚ Central and West Africa‚ and Central America. An estimated 1.5 million small farmers grow the crop in Indonesia‚ whereas about 500‚000 people are directly employed in the sector in Malaysia‚ plus those connected with spin offs.[1][2] Palm oil (from the African oil palm‚ Elaeis guineensis) is
Premium Palm oil
AC 340-01 Externalities Assignment April 2‚ 2012 The Externality costs of Environment As we all start our day in the morning‚ the first thing we do is step outside and watch the sky or the colored sun. However‚ we tend to forget that we don’t actually get to see the natural colors of the sun through all the layers of pollution within the air. We are not just deprived of seeing this beautiful sight but also there is an increase in diseases‚ infections and death that is caused by pollution
Premium Fossil fuel Renewable energy Wind power
Negative Externalities We live and work in a world driven by a fossil fueled economy. Our cars and other dominant forms of transport run primarily on gasoline derived from oil. Our homes and work places stay heated and cooled using electricity generated by utilities heavily dependent on coal. Many air pollution issues such as climate change‚ acid rain and smog are directly related to our energy choices. Solutions to air quality issues range from calls for greater energy efficiency to increased
Premium Fossil fuel Renewable energy Coal
Importance of Externalities Our federal‚ state‚ and local governments are challenged each day with producing specific incentives that help boost growth in our economy‚ help protect our environment‚ and the safety of our well being. These challenges can often be achieved by the government stepping in and dealing with externalities. Externalities are effects on those not involved in the market but have can have a significant impact on everyone. “When an externality – the gap
Premium Market failure Externality Welfare economics
Externalities occur when the decisions and actions of others contribute and benefit a third party. The goods and services that benefit the third party are known as positive externalities. In health care‚ the external benefits in most systems is the care provided to others by the medical staff at these facilities. We aim to present a perspective on market failures caused by these externalities and evaluate the presence and degree of these market
Premium Health care Medicine Physician
1. Introduction With the rapid development of new communications technology and network technology‚ some industries such as information industry show significant network externality characteristics. Network externality has been defined as "a change in the benefit‚ or surplus‚ that an agent derives from a good when the number of other agent consuming the same kind of good changes" (Liebowitz & Margolis‚ 1996). In other words‚ the product will be more valuable if more people use it. For example
Premium Externality Monopoly Competition
INTRODUCTION The aim of this assignment is to provide an introduction to the concept of externalities as used by economists‚ which are more specifically negative externalities. Then presents how externalities cause divergence between marginal social costs (benefits) and marginal private costs (benefits)‚ and draws attention to an article: Sark protest against extension of SEM vineyard project. The residents of Sark assembled to against the Sark Estate Management to plant vines‚ also protesters were
Premium Externality Welfare economics Market failure
problems arise as a result of the presence of externalities". The term environmental externalities refers to the chemical and biological wastes that are created as by-products of otherwise purposeful human activities‚ as opposed to effects or processes that occur in the natural environment. For example‚ power plants contribute heavily to emissions but while there is demand for their products and services they will carry on supplying. Externalities can cause market failure if the price mechanism
Premium Kyoto Protocol Carbon dioxide Greenhouse gas