Cover image for Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies - 6th International Conference : proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies, 1-4 October 2002, Kyoto, Japan.
Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies - 6th International Conference : proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies, 1-4 October 2002, Kyoto, Japan.
Title:
Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies - 6th International Conference : proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies, 1-4 October 2002, Kyoto, Japan.
Author:
Gale, John.
ISBN:
9780080532622
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (957 pages)
Contents:
Front Cover -- Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- VOLUME II -- PART I: ENERGY EFFICIENCY - GENERAL -- Chapter 1. Energy Efficiency and Environmental Implications in India's Household Sector -- Chapter 2. Effect on CO2 Reduction of Installation of Outer Skin Surface Technologies in Houses and Office Buildings -- Chapter 3. Evaluation of RDF Power Generation of Large-area Waste Treatment by LCA -- Chapter 4. Contributing to Reduction of CO2 Emissions Through Development of a Heat-integrated Distillation Column -- Chapter 5. Effect of Fluctuation of Hot-water Demand on Actual Performance of Home Co-generation System -- Chapter 6. Literature Survey on Economics of Environmental Friendly Electricity Production -- PART II: ENERGY EFFICIENCY - INDUSTRY -- Chapter 7. The Cement Industry and Global Climate Change: Current and Potential Future Cement Industry CO2 Emissions -- Chapter 8. Improvement in Energy Efficiency of Re-rolling Furnaces for Stainless Steel Industry at Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India -- Chapter 9. Implementation of a Corporate-wide Process for Estimating Energy Consumption and Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Oil and Gas Industry Operations -- Chapter 10. Thermoneutral Co-production of Metals and Syngas without Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- Chapter 11. An Analytical Method of Constructing Best-mixed Power Generation Systems Reflecting Public Preference -- Chapter 12. Application of the API Compendium of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Estimation Methodologies for the Oil and Gas Industry to Examine Potential Emission Reductions -- Chapter 13. Cleaner Production Technology and Bankable Energy Efficiency Drives in Fertilizer Industry in India to Minimise Greenhouse Gas Emissions - Case Study -- Chapter 14. CO2 Reduction in the Ironmaking Process by Waste Recycling and By-product Gas Conversion.

PART III: ZERO EMISSION POWER PLANTS -- Chapter 15. Clean Coal-fired Power Plant Technology to Address Climate Change Concerns -- Chapter 16. An 865 MW Lignite Fired CO2 Free Power Plant - A Technical Feasibility Study -- Chapter 17. Recent Developments on Flue Gas CO2 Recovery Technology -- Chapter 18. IGCC - The Best Choice for Producing Low-CO2 Power -- Chapter 19. Modeling Infrastructure for a Fossil Hydrogen Energy System with CO2 Sequestration -- PART IV: ECONOMICS -- Chapter 20. A CO2-Infrastructure for EOR in the North Sea (CENS): Macroeconomic Implications for Host Countries -- Chapter 21. Economic Modeling of the Global Adoption of Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies -- Chapter 22. Economic Benefits of a Technology Strategy and R&D Program in Carbon Sequestration -- Chapter 23. Prospects for Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies Assuming Their Technological Learning -- Chapter 24. CO2 Storage and Sink Enhancements: Developing Comparable Economics -- Chapter 25. Carbon Management Strategies for Existing U.S. Generation Capacity: A Vintage-based Approach -- Chapter 26. Examining Planned U.S. Power Plant Capacity Additions in the Context of Climate Change -- Chapter 27. Uncertainties in CO2 Capture and Sequestration Costs -- Chapter 28. Costs of Renewable Energy and CO2 Capture and Storage -- Chapter 29. Costs and Performance of CO2 and Energy Transmission -- PART V: POLICY - OVERVIEW -- Chapter 30. Experience Curves for Environmental Technology and Their Relationship to Government Actions -- Chapter 31. Greenhouse Gas Intensity Targets vs. Absolute Emission Targets -- Chapter 32. Canadian Initiatives on CO2 Capture and Storage: Towards Zero Emissions from Fossil Fuels -- Chapter 33. Australia's Renewable Energy Certificate System -- Chapter 34. Financial Incentives for Climate Neutral Energy Carriers.

PART VI: POLICY - KYOTO PROTOCOL -- Chapter 35. Possible Imperfection of International Emissions Trading Under the Existence of Hot Air -- Chapter 36. The Effect of Emissions Trading and Carbon Sequestration on the Cost of CO2 Emissions Mitigation -- Chapter 37. CO2 Emissions Trading Market Systems as an Environmental Policy Option and Assessment of its Effect - Evaluating Intertemporal Trading in Particular -- Chapter 38. CDM Investment: Market Actors' Perceptions -- Chapter 39. Potential Evaluation of CO2 Emissions Reduction by CDM Projects - Project Design to Provide Benefit to Both Developed and Developing Countries -- Chapter 40. Economic Evaluation of Sectoral Emission Reduction Objectives for Climate Change -- Chapter 41. New Renewable Energy Innovation Partnerships: Elements of a Constructive Carbon Strategy for Norway's Industry and Government -- Chapter 42. Optimization of Natural-gas Utilization at Lanzhou City in China -- Chapter 43. Potential for Co-utilisation of Coal with Other Fuels to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- Chapter 44. Commercial Viability of Space Solar Power System as a CDM Project -- Chapter 45. Study on Effective Institutions to Make CDM Projects Viable -- Chapter 46. Economic and Greenhouse Gas Emissions Assessment of Excess Biomass Extracted from Future Kraft Pulp Mills -- Chapter 47. Transportation, CDM, and GHG Emission Reductions -- PART VII: NON-CO2 GASES -- Chapter 48. An Assessment of the Abatement Options and Costs for Reducing the Emissions of the Engineered Chemicals -- Chapter 49. Potential Reduction of Fluorocarbon Emissions Under the Enforcement of New Laws in Japan -- Chapter 50. Direct Global Warming Emissions from Flat Panel Display Manufacturing and Reduction Opportunities -- Chapter 51. New Alternative Gas Process Feasibility Study for PFC Emission Reduction from Semiconductor CVD Chamber Cleaning.

Chapter 52. RD&D Implications of Multigas Radiative Forcing Scenarios -- Chapter 53. Dynamic Model for the Methane Emission from Manure Storage -- Chapter 54. Coal Mine Ventilation Air Methane Catalytic Combustion Gas Turbine -- Chapter 55. The Effective Management of Methane Emissions from Natural Gas Pipelines -- Chapter 56. Nitrous Oxide Emission from Purification of Liquid Portion of Swine Waste -- PART VIII: FUEL CELLS -- Chapter 57. High Efficiency Carbon and Hydrogen Fuel Cells for CO2 Mitigated Power -- Chapter 58. Multi-criteria Optimization of On-site Heating, Cooling and Power Generation with Solid Oxide Fuel Cells - Gas Turbine Combined Cycle Units -- Chapter 59. Optimised CO2 Avoidance Through Integration of Enhanced Oil and Gas Recovery with Solid Oxide Fuel Cells -- Chapter 60. An Experimental Investigation into the Use of Molten Carbonate Fuel Cells to Capture CO2 from Gas Turbine Exhaust Gases -- Chapter 61. High Efficiency CO2 Separation and Concentration System by Using Molten Carbonate -- PART IX: RENEWABLE ENERGY -- Chapter 62. Renewable Energy: Prospects for Supplying Electricity in the Deregulated Market in the Philippines -- Chapter 63. Technological Options for Cost-effective and Eco-friendly Power Generation for Development of Remote and Rural Areas in India -- Chapter 64. Greening Electricity Generation in South Africa Through Wind Energy -- Chapter 65. Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Opportunities Through the Application of Solar Power in Bangladesh -- Chapter 66. Corporate Environmentalism in India: Social and Community Issues -- PART X: BIOMASS -- Chapter 67. Biomass Energy with Geological Sequestration of CO2: Two for the Price of One? -- Chapter 68. Modelling Bio-energy with Carbon Storage (BECS) in a Multi-region Version of FLAMES.

Chapter 69. A Life Cycle Analysis of Biomass Energy System Taking Sustainable Forest Management into Consideration -- Chapter 70. The Synthesis of Clean Fuels from CO2 Rich Biosyngas -- Chapter 71. Reduced CO2 Mitigation Costs by Multi-functional Biomass Production -- Chapter 72. New Fuel BCDF (Bio-Carbonized-Densified-Fuel): The Effect of Semi-carbonization -- Chapter 73. New Renewable Energy Innovation Partnerships: Elements of a Constructive Carbon Strategy for Norway's Industry and Government -- Chapter 74. Carbon Sequestration in Plantations and the Economics of Energy Crop Production: The Case of Salix Production in Sweden -- Chapter 75. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Bio-ethanol and Bio-diesel Fuel Supply Systems -- PART XI: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND UTILISATION -- Chapter 76. The Potential Role of Biotechnology in Addressing the Long-term Problem of Climate Change in the Context of Global Energy and Economic Systems -- Chapter 77. The Controlled Eutrophication Process: Using Microaigae for CO2 Utilization and Agricultural Fertilizer Recycling -- Chapter 78. The Improvement of Microalgal Productivity by Reducing Light-harvesting Pigment - Analysis of a Phycocyanin-deficient Mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6714 -- Chapter 79. Effective CO2 Removal by Chlorella sp.HA-1 in Various Cultivation Methods -- Chapter 80. Enzymatic Synthesis of Pyruvic Acid and L-Lactic Acid from Carbon Dioxide -- PART XII: LAND USE AND SINKS -- Chapter 81. Analysis of Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Options Within a Multi-sector Economic Framework -- Chapter 82. CSiTE Studies on Carbon Sequestration in Soils -- Chapter 83. Microagriculture - Biofixation of CO2 Using Nitrogen-fixing Microalgae in Rice Fields -- Chapter 84. Possibility of CO2 Fixation on Arid Land in Western Australia -- PART XIII: UTILISATION - ALGAE.

Chapter 85. CO2 Reforming of Methane Catalyzed by Ni-loaded Zeolite-based Catalysts.
Abstract:
Climate change is an issue that is highly debated around the globe. This book brings together the papers that were presented at a conference dedicated to this issue, held in Kyoto in October 2002. Covering a broad range of areas, the topics presented will benefit both those working in the field of carbon dioxide recovery and sequestration, and those looking at the effects of non carbon dioxide greenhouse gases. An overview of the Research and Design technologies which aid in mitigating climate change is included, which will be invaluable to those researching new opportunities for dealing with this problem. An area of research that has seen a rapid rise in worldwide spend Will benefit both researchers in climate change, and those looking at new technologies to help deal with the problem Presents papers from contributors spread around the globe means that this book has world wide relevance.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: