Biodegradation of Hydrocarbons from Crude Oil by Pseudomonas putida A Project done under the guidance of Dr. K. Bharathi Department of Biotechnology. Submitted to the faculty Of Department of Biotechnology National Institute Of Technology‚ Warangal (A.P) Submitted By Febin P. Nalpady‚ Anzal Rahman‚ Shruti Sharma‚ Sindhuja Nandiraju‚ Giraboina
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Chapter 1 THE PROBLEM Introduction Medical waste can cause pollution and disease if it is not handled properly. Infectious waste‚ especially sharps‚ poses a risk to anyone who comes into contact with it. The WHO estimates that 40% of hepatitis cases and 12% of HIV cases worldwide are caused by occupational exposure. Hospitals also produce small amounts of chemical‚ pharmaceutical and radioactive waste‚ which need specialist handling. Added to this‚ there will be large amounts of more
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Environmental Problems And Its Effects Physical Science 101 ( Earth Science ) BEED/BSE-3 Submitted by: Nor-aliya D. Balt Sheila Mae Rosete Submitted to: Mr. Tristan Babaylan The Earth’s environment is in a sorry state‚ with no hope of getting it better any time soon. Wherever one looks‚ one encounters pollution in all its forms. Forests are disappearing. Green areas around cities are being replaced by concrete buildings. Waste products are being dumped indiscriminately. Water
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CU311 The Principles of Infection Prevention and Control Explain employees’ roles and responsibilities in relation to the prevention and control of infection. To ensure that their own health and hygiene not pose a risk to service users and colleagues To ensure effective hand washing is carried out when working with service users‚ giving personal care‚ handling/preparing food. To ensure they use protective clothing provided when needed and appropriate. Explain employers’ responsibilities in relation
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Project Objectives Significant chemical waste is generated from the labs on campus: 1. To find out how are these chemicals disposed. 2. To suggest what is the optimum way of disposing them. 3. Identification of the risks involved. Contents 1. PROJECT OBJECTIVES……………………………………………1 4. INTRODUCTION…………………………………..........................5 4.1 Waste…………………………….……………..........................5 4.2 Chemical Waste……………………………………………….6 4.3 Hazardous Chemical Wastes…………………………….7 4.4
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Environmental Council of Zambia National Solid Waste Management Strategy for Zambia September 2004 TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Tables Abbreviations 1.0 iii vi 1 vii Acknowledgements Introduction to the strategy 1.1 BACKGROUND .................................................................................................................................................. 1 1.2 THE OPERATIONAL LEGAL AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK OF THE STRATEGY ........................................
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Can We Say "NO" To Recycling Dr. Nadia El-Kholy. English 113. Tamer Wadid Shalaby. Final Draft Paper. Lately the earth’s capacity to tolerate exploitation and absorb solid wastes disposal has diminished‚ due to excess trashing. People dispose lots of stuff‚ and simply do not care. Therefore scientists found out a way to reuse things and that process was called "recycling". This new approach seemed quite successful at the beginning‚ until its true identity appeared. Recycling first started as man’s
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Intro: Mercury can be used in many different products such as barometers‚ florescent lamps‚ and electrical switches and can be in the fish that we eat‚ whether the fish was caught in a local lake or bought from the grocery store. Mercury is a naturally occurring element in the earth’s crust that can be moved around from volcanoes‚ coal burning plants‚ mining‚ and other natural or human actions. “Mercury is well-documented as a toxic chemical that is atmospherically transported on a local‚ regional
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recovery; 2) development of a sorting pre-treatment process suitable for Korean MSW collection systems; 3) demonstration of the feasibility of Korean food waste treatment as one component of an integrated waste management system including landfill and incineration. In case of the 15 tonnes/day food waste treatment capacity‚ the operational cost of the plant was estimated to be $25/tonne of food waste. Treatment and the construction costs
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Renewable vs. non-renewable energy sources‚ forms and technologies prepared by. A.Gritsevskyi‚ IAEA Objective of this paper is to provide International Recommendations for Energy Statistics (IRES) with suggested definition of renewable and nonrenewable energy grouping and relevant discussion that could be used in updated energy statistics manual. Second objective is to give a short literature overview with relevant definitions and argumentation. Suggestion on how renewable energy forms and
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