Journal of Sustainable Development

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生态足迹概念及在国外的应用

生态足迹概念及在国外的应用

生态足迹概念及其在国外的应用黄宁郭玥锋(奥克兰大学建筑与规划学院, 新西兰奥克兰1004)摘要本文分为两部分,第一部分详细介绍了生态足迹概念的产生、发展和计算方法;第二部分从地域规模(宏观)和具体学科分类(微观)两种情形下介绍了生态足迹在国外的应用。

该文目的在于使读者能够对生态足迹概念有一个较清晰的了解,并且知道其广泛的适用性,同时也为国内生态足迹概念研究人员提供相应的国外在此领域的研究和文献线索。

关键词生态足迹概念国外应用The Conception and Overseas Application of Ecological FootprintHUANG Ning GUO Yue-fengSchool of Architecture and Planning, University of Auckland1Auckland City, New Zealand, 1004AbstractThis paper includes two sections. The first section introduces the origination, the development, and the counting method of Ecological Footprint in detail. The second section articulates the comprehensive application of Ecological Footprint overseas according to the group categorized by different geographic levels and the group categorized by various concrete disciplines. The paper aims to transmit some unambiguous information about Ecological Footprint to readers as well as leading them to understand both the conception of Ecological Footprint and its general availability in practice. Moreover, the paper can provide 1黄宁(1971-),男,河南开封人,高级工程师,新西兰奥克兰大学博士研究生;主要研究方向为城市建筑和交通的可持续发展性。

中国农业可持续发展水平评价中国农业可持续发展水平评价

中国农业可持续发展水平评价中国农业可持续发展水平评价

中图分类号: F303.2
文献标识码: A
文章编号: 1008-0864( 2015) 04-0135-08
Evaluation of Agriculture Sustainable Development Level in China
XIN Ling,HU Zhi-quan*
( Institute of Agricultural Economics and Development,Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences,Beijing 100081,China)
1.1 评价指标体系构建 本研究中指标体系分 3 个层次。第一是目标
层,它是综合各层指标数据的总指标,即反映中国 农业可持续发展综合水平的综合评价指标; 第二 是准则层,根据农业可持续发展的内涵,从经济社 会发展、资源减量化投入、资源循环利用及生态环 境 4 个准则反映中国农业可持续发展水平; 第三 是指标层,将 4 个准则详细化,用 17 个具体指标 反映 4 个准则的发展状况( 表 1) 。
准则层 Guidelines layer
指标 xi Index xi
权重 wi Weight wi
指标层 Index layer
指标 xij Index xij
权重 wij Weight wij
计算方法 Computing
收稿日期: 2015-05-13; 接受日期: 2015-07-08 基金项目: 中国农业科学院科技创新工程项目( ASTIP-IAED-2015-02) ; 农业部软科学项目( 201510) 资助。 作者简介: 辛 岭,副研究员,博士,主要从事农业现代化与现代农业研究。E-mail: xinling@ caas.cn。* 通信作者: 胡志全,研究员,

Maria Manta Conroy, Ph.D.

Maria Manta Conroy, Ph.D.

Maria Manta Conroy, Ph.D.City & Regional Planning, Austin E. Knowlton School of Architecture275 West Woodruff AvenueColumbus, OH 43210-1138Phone: 614-292-8044 Email: Conroy.36@PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION•Bachelor of Science (Systems Engineering).University of Pennsylvania. May 1989•Master of Science (Systems Engineering). University of Virginia. May 1993•Master of Planning (Environmental Planning). University of Virginia. May 1994•Ph.D. (City & Regional Planning). University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.September 1994 - December 2000o Dissertation: Planning for Sustainable Development: A Comparative Analysis of the Preparation Process and Content of Community Comprehensive Plans RECENT APPOINTMENTS•Assistant Professor, Environmental Science Graduate Program. Interdisciplinary Program Appointment. The Ohio State University. May 2004-present•Assistant Professor of City & Regional Planning. Austin E. Knowlton School of Architecture, The Ohio State University. January 2000-present•Executive Director. 1000 Friends of Central Ohio, Columbus, Ohio. March 2002-December 2002RECENT REFEREED PUBLICATIONS•Conroy, Maria Manta. Forthcoming. Moving the Middle Ahead: Challenges and Opportunities of Sustainability in Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio. Journal of PlanningEducation and Research.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. 2006. E-participation in Planning: An Analysis of Cities Adopting On-line Citizen Participation Tools. Environment andPlanning C 24(3): 371-384.•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2006. The Growth of E-government in Municipal Government. Journal of Urban Technology 13(1):81 – 107.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. 2005. Informing and Interacting: The Use of E-government for Citizen Participation in Planning. Journal of E-Government1(3): 73-92.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Philip R. Berke. 2004. What Makes a Good Sustainable Development Plan? An Analysis of Factors that Influence Principles of SustainableDevelopment. Environment and Planning A 36:1381-1396.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Steven I. Gordon. 2004. Utility of Interactive Computer Based Materials for Enhancing Public Participation. Environmental Planning andManagement 47(1): 19-33•Conroy, Maria Manta. 2004. EcoCity Columbus: Using an Ohio State University Planning Class to Bring Sustainability Concepts to Columbus, Ohio. InternationalJournal of Sustainability in Higher Education 5(2): 199-212.•Conroy, Maria Manta. 2003. The Process of Planning for Sustainable Development: Dimensions, Comparisons, and Insights. International Journal of Sustainable Development6(4):460-477.•Berke, Philip R.; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2000. Are We Planning for Sustainable Development? An Evaluation of 30 Comprehensive Plans. Journal of the AmericanPlanning Association 66(1): 21-33.o Recipient of American Planning Association’s Journal of the American PlanningAssociation 2001 Award for Best Article.EDITOR REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS•Conroy, Maria Manta. Forthcoming, 2006. Book Review of Barlett, P. F. and Chase,G. W. (Eds.) (2004) Sustainability on campus: Stories and strategies for change.Cambridge MA: MIT Press. 327 pp. Journal of Architectural and Planning Research.•Conroy, Maria Manta. 2004. Book Review of Portney, K (2003) Taking sustainable cities seriously: Economic development, the environment, and quality of life inAmerican cities. Cambridge MA: MIT Press. 284pp. Journal of the American PlanningAssociation 70(2):238.•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2004. E-governance: On-line Citizen Participation Tools for Planners. American Planning Association PAS Report Number525.•Conroy, Maria Manta. 2002. Book Review of Chiras, Daniel D., John P. Reganold, and Oliver S. Owen. 2002. Natural Resource Conservation, Management for aSustainable Future, Eighth Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. Journal ofPlanning Literature 17(1):68.•Berke, Philip R.; and Maria Manta. 1999. Planning for Sustainable Development: Measuring Progress in Plans. Working Paper for the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. OTHER PUBLICATIONS•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; and Maria Manta Conroy (editors). 2005. E-Government and Planning: Key Citizen Participation Issues and Applications. John Glenn Institute for PublicService and Public Policy, /1811/519.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. 2005. Introduction in E-Government and Planning: Key Citizen Participation Issues and Applications. John GlennInstitute for Public Service and Public Policy, /1811/519.•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2005. Incorporating Development Services in E-Government and Planning: Key Citizen Participation Issues and Applications. JohnGlenn Institute for Public Service and Public Policy, /1811/519.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. 2005. Conclusion in E-Government and Planning: Key Citizen Participation Issues and Applications. John Glenn Institute forPublic Service and Public Policy, /1811/519.•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer S.; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2004. Bringing Planning to your Fingertips. The Ohio Planner’s News 54(5):1, 3•Evans-Cowley, Jennifer S.; and Maria Manta Conroy. 2004. Online Citizen Information Tools for Planners. InfoText 80:8-10.PUBLICATIONS SUBMITTED AND IN PROGRESS•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Timothy Beatley. Under Review. Getting it done: An exploration of sustainability efforts in practice. Journal of Planning Practice and Research.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Al-Azad Iqbal. In Progress. Communities adopting sustainability initiatives: What factors are important? Local Environment.•Simpson, David; Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; and Maria Manta Conroy. In Progress.Environment and Planning - B•Conroy, Maria Manta. In Progress. Leading the Way to Smart Growth – The role of leadership in smart growth efforts across the U.S. Environment and Planning - C.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Jack L Nasar. In Progress. Running in Place: Exercise and its Relationship to the Built Environment. Journal of the American Planning Association.•Conroy, Maria Manta; and Al-Izad Iqbal. In Progress. Factors influencing adopting sustainability efforts: a pilot study of Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio.PAPER PRESENTATIONS•Leading the Way to Smart Growth: The Role of Leadership in Smart Growth Efforts Across the U.S. paper presented to the Annual Conference of the Association ofCollegiate Schools of Planning, Kansas City, MO, October 27-29, 2005.•Moving the Middle Ahead: Challenges and Opportunities of Sustainability in the Midwest paper presented to the Annual Conference of the Association of CollegiateSchools of Planning, October 21-24, 2004, Portland, Oregon.•Who Uses What Tools and Why: Planners, Participation, and E-Governance (with Dr.Jennifer Evans-Cowley) paper presented to the Ohio State University City andRegional Planning Program’s Conference on E-governance: Developing on-line citizenparticipation tools, March 3-5, 2004, Columbus, Ohio.•Sustainability and the “Average” City: An Exploration of Bringing Sustainability Concepts to Columbus, Ohio (with Dr. Timothy Beatley) paper presented to theAnnual Conference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, November21 – 24, 2002, Baltimore, Maryland.•Planning for Sustainable Development: An Analysis of Factors that Influence Principles of Sustainable Development, paper presented to the Center for Urban andRegional Analysis, October 11, 2002, The Ohio State University.•What Makes a Good Sustainable Development Plan? An Analysis of Factors that Influence Principles of Sustainable Development, paper presented to the AnnualConference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. November 8-11,2001. Cleveland, Ohio.•Planning for Sustainable Development: A Comparative Analysis of Community Planning Processes, paper presented to the Annual Conference of the Association ofCollegiate Schools of Planning. November 2-5, 2000. Atlanta, Georgia.INVITED PRESENTATIONS•“Why Aren’t We Getting There? Key elements and barriers for adoption of a sustainable development paradigm.” Theories, Models and Methods of SustainableDevelopment Forum (November 12, 2005, Cincinnati, OH.)•“Planning and Sustainable Development” Ohio EPA Sustainable Redevelopment Training (June, 2004).•“Stakeholder Analysis and Watersheds” Ohio Watershed Academy (February, 2003).•“Sustainability and the “Average” City: An Exploration of Bringing Sustainability Concepts to Columbus, Ohio” City & Regional Planning Brown Bag Series(November, 2002).•“Smart Growth and Ohio” Jennifer M. McSweeney Ohio Land Use Program (November, 2002).•“Planning for Sustainable Development: A Comparative Analysis of the Preparation and Content of Community Comprehensive Plans” City & Regional Planning BrownBag Series (February, 2001).•“Public Participation and the Environment” Simply Living Annual Conference, The Ohio State University (October, 2001).RECENT FUNDED RESEARCH•Joseph Konen, Maria Manta Conroy, Casey Hoy. Sustainable Community Index, a Framework for Community Planning. 2006-2007. Funded by The Ohio StateUniersity CARES Grant ($2,325).•Joseph Konen, Maria Manta Conroy. Developing a Sustainable Community Index (SCI). 2006-2007. Funded by The Ohio State University CARES Faculty SupportGrant ($10,000).•Peter M. Shane, Stephen R. Acker, Maria Manta Conroy, Jennifer Evans-Cowley, Steven I. Gordon, and Gerald M. Kosicki. Building Democracy through OnlineCitizen Deliberation. 2005-2006. Funded by the Battelle Endowment for Technologyand Human Affairs ($59,741.00).•Maria Manta Conroy. “Planners’ Day in School” 2005. Funded by The Ohio State University, Outreach and Engagement ($4111).•Maria Manta Conroy and Steven I. Gordon. “Technology Enhanced Participation for Watershed Planning,” 2005-2006. Funded by the US Geological Society ($66,437).•Maria Manta Conroy and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. "E-Government: Citizen Engagement in Public Planning," 2003-2004. Funded by the Battelle Endowment forTechnology & Human Affairs ($46,011).•Maria Manta Conroy and Jennifer Evans-Cowley. "E-Government: Citizen Engagement in Public Planning," 2003-2004. Office of Continuing Education($2,000).•Maria Manta Conroy. “Sustainability and the ‘Average’ City: An Exploration of the Pervasiveness of Sustainability Concepts in Communities in Central Ohio,” 2002-2003.Funded by the Center for Urban and Regional Analysis at the Ohio State University($31,141).•Steven I. Gordon and Maria Manta Conroy. “Linking Measures of Watershed Quality to Citizen Participation to Facilitate Watershed Protection,” 2000-2001. Funded byThe Ohio State University Environmental Policy Initiative ($10,300).TEACHING EXPERIENCE AT THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY●CRP 643: American City Planning Since 1900 (class size: 60)Spring 2001, 2003, 2004, Fall 2004, 2005●CRP 697: Study at a Foreign Institution (Dresden Exchange) (class size: 17)2005Spring,●CRP 722: Introduction to Analysis & Use of Environmental Factors in City andRegional Planning (class size: 20)Winter 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006●CRP 724: Introduction to Planning for Sustainable Development (class size: 20)Winter 2001, Fall 2001 (team taught), Spring 2002, Spring 2004, Fall 2004, Winter2006, Spring 2006●CRP 750: Resolving Social Conflict (team taught) (class size: 30)Fall 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005●CRP 780: Workshop in Urban and Regional Planning Techniques (class size: 20)Fall 2000 (team taught), 2001●CRP 794: Development Dispute Resolution (class size: 10)2004Winter●CRP 815/816: Case Studies in Urban Planning for Housing/ Seminar inHousing (international exchange class with the Technical University of Dresden(TUD), Germany) (class size: 12) S pring 2002●CRP 821: Regional Planning Studio, Watershed Planning (team taught) (class size: 6)2001SpringDISSERTATION AND THESIS COMMITTEES•Al-Izad Iqbal, Doctoral candidate. Dissertation committee member•Mustapha Beydoun, Ph.D. (2004) Dissertation committee member•Kang-Ping Shen, Ph.D. (2003) Dissertation committee member•Vicki Garrett, MS candidate (Natural Resources). Thesis committee member•Sara J.S. Nikolic, MS (Natural Resources) (2005) Thesis committee member•Kelly Dufour, MCRP (2001) Thesis committee memberPROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES AND SERVICEProfessional•Peer reviewer for: Journal of the American Planning Association, Journal of Planning Education and Research, Journal of Planning Literature, Landscape and Urban Planning, Journal ofEnvironmental Planning and Management, and Environment and Planning C.•Special Issue reviewer for: Environmental Practice “Framing Intractable Environmental Disputes.”•Abstract reviewer: 2004 and 2005 conferences of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (Environmental Track).•Discussant and moderator: 2004 and 2005 conferences of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (Sustainability: International Examples and Issues; EnergyPlanning and Climate Change).•Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant program reviewer (June 2003)•EPA STAR grant fellowship reviewer (February 2001)University and Department•Knowlton School of Architecture Digital Library Committee (2000-2005)•Graduate faculty representative (2001-present; approximately annually)•Rural-Urban Task Force member (2001-present)•Center for Urban and Regional Analysis member (2001-present)•C&RP Award Committee (2000)•C&RP Faculty Search Committee (2000)PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS•American Planning Association•Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning•Society for American City and Regional Planning History•Affiliate, Ohio Center for Wetland and River Restoration。

100道关于可持续发展的问题及答案(中文+英文)

100道关于可持续发展的问题及答案(中文+英文)

1.世界上哪个国家拥有最多的太阳能发电站?Which country in the world has the most solar power plants?答案:德国。

它是全球太阳能发电的领导者,大力推动可再生能源发展。

Answer: Germany. It is a global leader in solar power generation and has been actively promoting the development of renewableenergy.2.什么是“零浪费生活”?What is "zero waste living"?答案:零浪费生活是一种生活方式,通过减少废物和资源浪费,最大限度地利用和循环利用资源。

Answer: Zero waste living is a lifestyle that aims to minimize waste and resource consumption by maximizing the use andrecycling of resources.3.什么是“慢时尚”?What is "slow fashion"?答案:慢时尚是一种注重质量、可持续性和环保的时尚理念,与快时尚相对。

Answer: Slow fashion is a fashion concept that emphasizesquality, sustainability, and environmental consciousness, asopposed to fast fashion.4.如何制作环保家居清洁剂?How can eco-friendly household cleaners be made?答案:你可以使用柠檬、苏打水、醋等天然材料制作环保家居清洁剂,避免使用化学物质。

Answer: You can make eco-friendly household cleaners usingnatural ingredients such as lemon, baking soda, vinegar, etc., while avoiding the use of chemical substances.5.为什么要支持地方农民市场?Why should local farmers' markets be supported?答案:地方农民市场有助于支持当地农民,促进农业可持续发展,提供新鲜、本地的食物。

人类非物质文化遗产——热贡艺术的保护、传承与可持续发展

人类非物质文化遗产——热贡艺术的保护、传承与可持续发展

Sustainable Development 可持续发展, 2023, 13(5), 1590-1598 Published Online September 2023 in Hans. https:///journal/sd https:///10.12677/sd.2023.135180人类非物质文化遗产——热贡艺术的保护、传承与可持续发展李柯桦山东大学历史文化学院,山东 济南收稿日期:2023年8月7日;录用日期:2023年9月8日;发布日期:2023年9月15日摘要热贡艺术作为中国最早产生的民间工艺美术之一,于2006年列入第一批国家级非物质遗产名录;在2009年被联合国教科文组织列入《人类非物质文化遗产代表作名录》,具有极高的历史价值、文化价值和艺术价值。

本文旨在将热贡艺术与其他联合国教科文组织(UNESCO)非遗项目中《人类非物质文化遗产代表作名录》(Representative List of the Intangible Culture Heritage of Humanity )以及《保护良好实例登记》(Register of Good Safeguarding Practice )中的部分同领域项目进行对比分析,借鉴国外相关经验,从而推动热贡艺术更好的保护、传承与可持续发展。

关键词非物质文化遗产,热贡艺术,保护与传承,可持续发展Protection, Inheritance and Sustainable Development of Regong Art: The Intangible Cultural Heritage of HumanityKehua LiSchool of History and Culture, Shandong University, Jinan ShandongReceived: Aug. 7th , 2023; accepted: Sep. 8th , 2023; published: Sep. 15th, 2023AbstractRegong Art, as one of the earliest folk arts and crafts in China, was included in the First Batch of National Intangible Heritage Lists in 2006; In 2009, it was included in the Representative List of In-李柯桦tangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO, which has high historical value, cultural value and appreciation value. The purpose of this paper is to compare and analyze Regong Art with some projects in the same field in the Representative List of the Intangible Culture Heritage of Hu-manity and the Register of Good Safeguarding Practice in UNESCO intangible cultural heritage projects, and learn from relevant foreign experience, so as to promote better protection of Regong Art Inheritance and sustainable development.KeywordsIntangible Cultural Heritage, Regong Art, Protection and Inheritance, Sustainable DevelopmentThis work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0)./licenses/by/4.0/1. 引言非物质文化作为人类文明的重要组成部分,具有文化、科学、历史、美学、经济和社会价值[1]。

生态学英文杂志

生态学英文杂志

Acta Hydrochimica Et HydrobiologicaActa Oecologica-International Journal Of EcologyAfrican Journal Of EcologyAgriculture Ecosystems & EnvironmentAihajAmazoniana-Limnologia Et Oecologia Regionalis Systemae Fluminis Amazonas AmbioAmerican Midland NaturalistAmerican NaturalistAnimal ConservationAnnals Of Agricultural And Environmental MedicineAnnual Review Of Ecology And SystematicsArchives Of Environmental Contamination And ToxicologyArchives Of Environmental HealthArid Land Research And ManagementAtmospheric EnvironmentAustral EcologyAustralian Journal Of Soil ResearchBasic And Applied EcologyBiocycleBiodiversity And ConservationBiogeochemistryBiological ConservationBiology And Fertility Of SoilsBiotropicaBulletin Of Environmental Contamination And ToxicologyCanadian Field-NaturalistCanadian Journal Of Soil ScienceCatenaChemical Speciation And BioavailabilityChemoecologyChemosphereClays And Clay MineralsClimate ResearchClimatic ChangeCoastal ManagementCommunications In Soil Science And Plant AnalysisCompost Science & UtilizationConservation BiologyConservation EcologyCritical Reviews In Environmental Science And TechnologyEcographyActa Hydrochimica Et HydrobiologicaActa Oecologica-International生态学》杂志上非洲生态学杂志》农业生态系统和环境AihajAmazoniana-Limnologia等环境科学Regionalis Systemae Fluminis亚马孙Ambio美国米德兰博物学家美国博物学家动物保护农业与环境医学年报生态学和系统学的年度审查环境污染和毒理学的档案环境健康档案旱地研究和管理大气环境南国生态澳大利亚土壤研究杂志》上基础和应用生态学生物环生物多样性和保护生物地球化学生物保护生物学和土壤肥力《环境污染和毒理学的公告加拿大地区加拿大土壤科学杂志》上系列化学物种形成和生物利用度Chemoecology光化层粘土和粘土矿物气候研究气候变化沿海管理通信在土壤科学和植物分析堆肥科学与利用保护生物学保护生态评论在环境科学和技术描述生态学Ecological ApplicationsEcological EconomicsEcological EngineeringEcological ModellingEcological MonographsEcological ResearchEcologyEcology LettersEcoscienceEcosystem HealthEcosystemsEcotoxicologyEcotoxicology And Environmental SafetyEkologia-BratislavaEnvironmentEnvironment InternationalEnvironmental And Ecological StatisticsEnvironmental Carcinogenesis & Ecotoxicology Reviews-Part C Of Journal Of Environmental Science And HealthEnvironmental ConservationEnvironmental Engineering ScienceEnvironmental ForensicsEnvironmental Geochemistry And HealthEnvironmental GeologyEnvironmental Health PerspectivesEnvironmental ManagementEnvironmental MicrobiologyEnvironmental Modeling & AssessmentEnvironmental Monitoring And AssessmentEnvironmental PollutionEnvironmental ResearchEnvironmental Science & TechnologyEnvironmental Science And Pollution ResearchEnvironmental TechnologyEnvironmental ToxicologyEnvironmental Toxicology And ChemistryEuropean Journal Of Soil BiologyEvolutionary EcologyEvolutionary Ecology ResearchField Analytical Chemistry And TechnologyFresenius Environmental BulletinFunctional EcologyGeomicrobiology JournalGlobal Change Biology生态学应用生态经济学生态工程生态模型生态专著生态研究生态生态学通讯Ecoscience生态系统健康生态系统生态毒理学生态毒理学和环境安全Ekologia-Bratislava环境国际环境环境和生态的统计数据环境致癌作用与生态毒理学Reviews-Part C的环境杂志》上科学和健康环境保护环境工程科学环境取证环境地球化学与健康环境地质环境健康展望环境管理环境微生物学环境建模与评估环境监测和评估环境污染环境研究环境科学与技术环境科学与污染研究环境技术环境毒理学环境毒理学和化学欧洲的土壤生物学》杂志上进化生态学进化生态学研究分析化学技术领域费森尤斯公司环境公报功能生态学地球微生物学杂志全球变化生物学Global Ecology And BiogeographyGlobal Environmental Change-Human And Policy Dimensions Ground WaterGround Water Monitoring And RemediationHealth PhysicsHuman And Ecological Risk AssessmentHydrological ProcessesHydrological Sciences Journal-Journal Des Sciences HydrologiquesInternational Biodeterioration & BiodegradationInternational Journal Of BiometeorologyInternational Journal Of Environment And PollutionInternational Journal Of Environmental Analytical ChemistryInternational Journal Of Environmental Health ResearchInternational Journal Of Life Cycle AssessmentInternational Journal Of Sustainable Development And World EcologyIsotopes In Environmental And Health StudiesJournal Of Applied EcologyJournal Of Arid EnvironmentsJournal Of Atmospheric ChemistryJournal Of BiogeographyJournal Of Chemical EcologyJournal Of Coastal ResearchJournal Of Contaminant HydrologyJournal Of EcologyJournal Of Environmental BiologyJournal Of Environmental Engineering-AsceJournal Of Environmental HealthJournal Of Environmental ManagementJournal Of Environmental MonitoringJournal Of Environmental QualityJournal Of Environmental RadioactivityJournal Of Environmental Science And Health Part A-Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental EngineeringJournal Of Environmental Science And Health Part B-Pesticides Food Contaminants And Agricultural WastesJournal Of Exposure Analysis And Environmental EpidemiologyJournal Of Hydrologic EngineeringJournal Of HydrologyJournal Of PaleolimnologyJournal Of Range ManagementJournal Of Soil And Water ConservationJournal Of The Air & Waste Management AssociationJournal Of The American Water Resources AssociationJournal Of The Chartered Institution Of Water And Environmental Management全球生态和生物地理学全球环境Change-Human和政策维度地下水地下水监测和修复健康物理学人类和生态风险评估水文过程水文科学Journal-Journal Des科学Hydrologiques国际生物退化和生物降解国际生物气象学杂志国际环境与污染杂志国际环境分析化学》杂志上国际环境卫生杂志》上的研究国际期刊的生命周期评估国际期刊的可持续发展和世界生态同位素在环境与健康的研究应用生态学杂志》《干旱的环境《大气化学生物地理学杂志化学生态学杂志》沿海研究杂志》《污染物水文《生态学杂志》环境生物学》杂志上《环境Engineering-Asce环境与健康杂志环境管理杂志》《环境监测《环境质量《环境放射性《环境科学与健康化工/有害物质和环境工程环境科学与健康杂志》的一部分B-Pesticides食品污染物和农业废物风险分析和环境流行病学杂志》上水文工程杂志《水文古湖沼学杂志》范围管理杂志》水土保持学报》上空气与废物管理协会杂志》上美国水资源协会杂志》上《特许机构的水和环境管理Journal Of Toxicology And Environmental Health-Part AJournal Of Toxicology And Environmental Health-Part B-Critical Reviews Journal Of Tropical EcologyJournal Of Water Resources Planning And Management-AsceLand Degradation & DevelopmentLandscape And Urban PlanningLandscape EcologyMicrobial EcologyMolecular EcologyNatural Areas JournalNatural HistoryNew Zealand Journal Of EcologyNordic HydrologyNorthwest ScienceOecologiaOikosOryxOzone-Science & EngineeringPedobiologiaPlant And SoilPlant EcologyPolish Journal Of Environmental StudiesPopulation EcologyProceedings Of The Linnean Society Of New South Wales Rangeland JournalRegulated Rivers-Research & Management Resources Conservation And RecyclingRestoration EcologyRevista Chilena De Historia NaturalRevue D Ecologie-La Terre Et La VieRussian Journal Of EcologySarsiaScience Of The Total EnvironmentSoil & Sediment ContaminationSoil Biology & BiochemistrySoil ScienceSoil Science Society Of America JournalSoil Use And ManagementSouthwestern NaturalistStochastic Environmental Research And Risk Assessment Trends In Ecology & EvolutionVie Et Milieu-Life And EnvironmentWaste Management & ResearchWater Air And Soil Pollution毒理学和环境Health-Part杂志》上《毒理学和环境Health-Part B-Critical评论《热带生态学水资源规划和Management-Asce杂志》上土地退化与发展景观和城市规划景观生态学微生物生态学分子生态学自然杂志自然历史新西兰生态学》杂志上北欧水文西北科学环境科学Oikos大羚羊Ozone-Science &工程Pedobiologia植物和土壤植物生态学波兰环境研究杂志》上种群生态学新南威尔士州的林奈学会学报》上牧场》杂志监管Rivers-Research &管理资源保护和回收恢复生态学航空杂志上Chilena De史学家自然La Vie Revue D Ecologie-La特等俄罗斯《生态学杂志》Sarsia科学的环境土壤和沉积物污染土壤生物学与生物化学土壤科学美国土壤科学学会杂志上土地使用和管理西南部的博物学家随机环境研究和风险评估生态学与进化的趋势Vie Et Milieu-Life和环境废物管理与研究空气水和土壤的污染Water Environment ResearchWater Quality Research Journal Of Canada Water ResearchWater Resources ManagementWater Resources ResearchWater SaWater Science And Technology Water-Engineering & Management Western North American Naturalist WetlandsWildlife Society Bulletin水环境研究加拿大水质研究杂志》上水的研究水资源管理水资源研究水公司水科学与技术Water-Engineering &管理西方北美国博物学家湿地野生动物协会公告。

第三章 可持续发展 Sustainable development

第三章 可持续发展 Sustainable development

第三章可持续发展Sustainable development一、可持续发展的由来1、古代朴素的可持续发展思想西方一些经济学家如马尔萨斯(1802年)、李嘉图(1817年)和穆勒(1900年)等,他们也较早地在著作中提出过人类消费的物质限制,即人类的经济活动范围存在着生态边界。

2、现代可持续发展思想的产生*早期的反思——《寂静的春天》*一服清醒剂——《增长的极限》*全球的觉醒——联合国人类环境会议*可持续发展的提出——《我们共同的未来》*重要的里程碑——联合国环境与发展大会二、可持续发展概念与内涵(一)对发展和可持续的理解1.发展的内涵•人类的发展观经历了数次跃迁①发展=经济增长•仅仅是指经济领域的活动•其目标是产值和利润的增长,物质财富的增加②发展=经济增长+经济结构优化•一定的社会经济改革③发展=经济增长+经济结构优化+环境保护④发展=可持续发展•发展并非是纯经济性的,是一个广泛的综合的概念;•发展是受限制的a.经济因素的制约b.社会因素的制约c.生态因素的制约(是最基本的)2.可持续性的内涵该过程在一个无限长的时期内,可以永远地保持下去,而系统的内外不仅没有数量和质量的衰减,甚至还有提高。

•对可持续性的理解与应用领域有关如:生态系统的可持续性,资源的可持续利用,可持续的环境等。

(二)可持续发展的概念1.布伦特兰夫人提出的概念定义:既满足当代人的需求,又不对后代人满足其自身需求的能力构成危害的发展。

1987年在《我们共同的未来》报告中提出1989年UNEP第15届理事会通过并得到接受和认同两个根本点a.人类要发展—满足当代人的基本需求b.不损害后代人的需求—体现了代际公平•该概念是目前最有权威和被引用最广泛的局限性a.仅强调了当代人与后代人之间的关系,未涉及人与自然的关系;b.在人与人的关系中,忽视了当代人之间的关系c.基本需求和满足需求的能力如何度量的问题2.几种具有代表性的定义(1)着重于自然属性的定义“保护和加强环境系统的生产更新能力”,即可持续发展是不超越环境再生能力的发展。

英文野鸡杂志列表解析

英文野鸡杂志列表解析

现在英文杂志太多太多,其中有的杂志并不规范。

部分SCI杂志虽然有影响因子,但是办刊宗旨与杂志质量并不高。

这些SCI杂志说不定哪天就会被除名,啥因子也都没有了。

希望对大家投稿和选择期刊有所帮助。

英文野鸡杂志列表:Academic Exchange QuarterlyAcademy of Contemporary Research Journal (AOCRJ)Acta de Gerencia Ciencia (CAGENA)Acta Advances in Agricultural Sciences (AAAS)Advances in Forestry LetterAl Ameen Journal of Medical Sciences (AJMS)Aloy Journal of Soft Computing and Applications (AJSCA)American International Journal of Contemporary Research (AIJCR)American International Journal of Contemporary Scientific ResearchAmerican Journal of Advanced Agricultural Research (AJAAR)American Journal of Advanced Drug DeliveryAmerican Journal of Advances in Medical Science (ARNACA)American Journal of Engineering ResearchAmerican Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research (AJPHR)American Journal of PharmTech Research (AJPTR)American Journal of Phytomedicine and Clinical TherapeuticsAmerican Journal of Scientific ResearchAmerican Journal of Social issues and HumanitiesAmerican Research JournalAnglisticum: International Journal of Literature, Linguistics & Interdisciplinary Studies Archives Des Sciences JournalArchives of Biological SciencesARNACA American Journal of Advances in Medical ScienceAsia-Pacific Journal of ResearchAsian Journal of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical SciencesAsian Journal of Health and Medical SciencesAsian Journal of Humanities and Social SciencesAsian Journal of Business and Management Sciences (AJBMS)Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical and Health SciencesAsian Journal of Pharmacy and Life ScienceAsian Journal of Pharmaceutical Research and Health Care (AJPRHC)Australasian Journal of HerpetologyAustralian Journal of Basic and Applied SciencesAustralian Journal of Business and Management Research (AJBMR)Ayupharm: International Journal of Ayurveda and Allied SciencesBioinformationThe BioscanBioresearch BulletinBioscience DiscoveryBiosciences, Biotechnology Research Asia (BBRA)British Biomedical BulletinBritish Journal of Economics, Finance and Management SciencesBritish Journal of ScienceBulletin of Mathematical Sciences & ApplicationsBulletin of Pharmaceutical ResearchBulletin of Society for Mathematical Services and StandardsCalodemaCanadian Chemical TransactionsCase Studies JournalsChemical Science TransactionsComputer Science ChronicleComputer Science JournalThe Criterion: An International Journal in EnglishCurrent BioticaCurrent DiscoveryCurrent Trends in Technology and Sciences (CTTS)The Dawn JournalDirect Research JournalsE-Library Science Research JournalExcelingTech Publishing Company, Ltd.Elixir International Journal (formerly Elixir Online Journal)Euro-Afro Journal of Arts and Social Sciences (EAJASS)European Academic ResearchEuropean Environmental Sciences and Ecology JournalEuropean International Journal of Applied Science and Technology(Centre for Promoting Knowledge [CPK], UK)European Journal of Academic Essays (EJAE)European Journal of Advanced Computer Science (EJACS)European Journal of Biotechnology and BioscienceEuropean Journal of Business and Social Sciences (EJBSS)European Journal of Contemporary Economics and Management(EJCEM, EJEM)European Journal of Educational Research (EUJER)European Journal of Educational Sciences (EJES)European Journal of Natural History (EJNH)European Journal of Scientific ResearchEuropean Journal of Sustainable DevelopmentEuropean Law and Politics Journal (ELPJ)European Scientific JournalFLUIDS: International Journal of Medical Fluid ManagementFOREX Technical Journal LibraryFrontiers in Aerospace EngineeringGalaxy: International Multidisciplinary Research JournalGlobal Journal of Management Science and TechnologyGlobal Journal of Medical and Health Sciences (GJM)Global Journal of Medicine and Public HealthGolden Research ThoughtsHygeia: Journal for Drugs and MedicinesIndian Journal of Applied-Basic Medical SciencesIndian Journal of Applied ResearchIndian Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biological Research (IJPBR)Indian Journal of Research AnvikshikiIndian Journal of Research in Pharmacy and Biotechnology (IJRPB)Indian Journal of Scientific Research (IJSR)Indian Streams Research JournalIndo American Journal of Pharmaceutical ResearchIndo-Global Journal of Pharmaceutical SciencesInnovations in Pharmaceuticals and Pharmacotherapy (IPP)Interdisciplinary Journal of Contemporary Research in BusinessInterdisciplinary Journal of Research in Business (IDJRB)International Ayurvedic Medical Journal (IAMJ)The International Asian Research Journal (TIARJ)International Design JournalThe International Interdisciplinary Journal of Education (IIJE)International Journal Advances in Social Science and Humanities(IJASSH)International Journal for Pharmaceutical Research Scholars (IJPRS)International Journal for Research & Development in Technology(IJRDT)International Journal for Scientific Research & DevelopmentInternational Journal of Abdominal Research (IJAR)International Journal of Advanced Engineering and Nano Technology (IJAENT)International Journal of Advanced Engineering ApplicationsInternational Journal of Advanced ResearchInternational Journal of Advanced Research in Computer and Communication Engineering (IJARCCE)International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science and Electronics Engineering (IJARCSEE)International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science and Software Engineering (IJARCSSE)International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science & Technology (IJARCST) International Journal of Advanced Research in Electrical, Electronics and Instrumentation Engineering (IJAREEIE)International Journal of Advanced Technology and Engineering Research (IJA TER) International Journal of Advanced Technology and Science (IJATS)International Journal of Advancements in Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering International Journal of Advancements in Research & Technology(IJOART)International Journal of Advances in Engineering & Technology(IJAET)International Journal of Advances in Power Systems (IJAPS)International Journal of Agriculture and Crop Sciences (IJACS)International Journal of Agricultural Management & DevelopmentInternational Journal of Agronomy & Plant ProductionInternational Journal of Application or Innovation in Engineering & Management (IJAIEM) International Journal of Applied Biology and Pharmaceutical Technology (IJABPT) International Journal of Applied Economic StudiesInternational Journal of Applied Linguistics & English LiteratureInternational Journal of Applied Research & Studies (iJARS)International Journal of Applied Research & Studies (iJARS)International Journal of Applied Sciences and Biotechnology(IJASBT)International Journal of Artificial Intelligence and MechatronicsInternational Journal of Arts and Entrepreneurship (IJAE)International Journal of Ayurveda and Pharma ResearchInternational Journal of Basic Medical Sciences and Pharmacy(IJBMSP)International Journal of Bio (IJOBIO)International Journal of Biomedical ScienceInternational Journal of Business and CommerceThe International Journal of Business & ManagementInternational Journal of Bussiness and Management InventionInternational Journal of Business and Social ResearchInternational Journal of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences(IJCPS)International Journal of Communication Networks and Information Security (IJCNIS) International Journal of Computational Engineering ResearchInternational Journal of Computer & Electronics Research (IJCER)International Journal of Computer and Information Technology(IJCIT)International Journal of Computer ApplicationsInternational Journal of Computer Application and Engineering Technology (IJCAET) International Journal of Computer Applications in Engineering Sciences (IJCAES) International Journal of Computer Science and Business InformaticsInternational Journal of Computer Science and Information SecurityInternational Journal of Computer Science and Information TechnologiesInternational Journal of Computer Science and Network (IJCSN)International Journal of Computer Science and Network Security(IJCSNS)International Journal of Computer Science Engineering (IJCSE)International Journal of Computer Science IssuesInternational Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied SciencesInternational Journal of Current ResearchInternational Journal of Current Research and Academic Review(IJCRAR)International Journal of Current Research and ReviewInternational Journal of Current ScienceInternational Journal of Development ResearchInternational Journal of Digital Library Services (IJODLS)International Journal of Drug Development and Research (IJDDR)International Journal of E-Computer Science EvolutionInternational Journal of Economics and Finance (IJEF)International Journal of Economics and ResearchInternational Journal of Economics, Commerce and Management(IJECM)The International Journal of Educational and Psychological AssessmentInternational Journal of Electrochemical ScienceInternational Journal of Electronics and Computer Research (IJECR)International Journal of Electronics Communication and Computer EngineeringInternational Journal of Electronics Communication and Computer Technology (IJECCT) International Journal of Emerging Science and Engineering (IJESE)International Journal of Emerging Sciences (IJES)International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced EngineeringInternational Journal of Energy & TechnologyInternational Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology(IJEAT)International Journal of Engineering and Applied SciencesInternational Journal of Engineering and Computer Science (IJECS)International Journal of Engineering and Innovative Technology(IJEIT)International Journal of Engineering and Management Research(IJEMR)The IJES: The International Journal of Engineering and ScienceInternational Journal of Engineering and Science Invention (IJESI)International Journal of Engineering InventionsInternational Journal of Engineering ResearchInternational Journal of Engineering Research and ApplicationsInternational Journal of Engineering Research and Development(IJERD)International Journal of Engineering Research and Science & Technology (IJERST) International Journal of Engineering Science & Advanced TechnologyInternational Journal of Engineering Science and Innovative Technology (IJESIT)International Journal of Engineering, Science and TechnologyInternational Journal of Engineering Sciences & Research Technology (IJESRT)International Journal of English and EducationInternational Journal of English Language & Translation Studies (IJ-ELTS)International Journal of English Language , Literature & Humanities(IJELLH)International Journal of Farming and Allied SciencesInternational Journal of Fundamental & Applied SciencesInternational Journal of GovernanceInternational Journal of Health ResearchInternational Journal of Health Sciences and ResearchInternational Journal of Human Resource and Procurement (IJHRP)International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI)The International Journal of Humanities & Social StudiesInternational Journal of Humanities, Engineering and Pharmaceutical SciencesInternational Journal of Information and Communication ResearchInternational Journal of Information and Communication Technology ResearchInternational Journal of Information Sources and Services: A Research Journal in Library Science (IJSS)International Journal of Information Technology & Business ManagementInternational Journal of Information Technology & Computer Science (IJITCS)International Journal of Innovative IdeasInternational Journal of Innovative Research and DevelopmentInternational Journal of Innovative Research and StudiesInternational Journal of Innovative Science and Modern Engineering(IJISME) International Journal of Innovative Technology and Exploring Engineering (IJITEE) International Journal of Innovative Technology and ResearchInternational Journal of Interdisciplinary and Multidisciplinary Studies (IJIMS) International Journal of Inventions in Pharmaceutical Sciences(IJIPS) International Journal of Inventive Engineering and Sciences (IJIES)The International Journal of Knowledge, Innovation and Entreprenurship International Journal of Language Learning and Applied Linguistics World International Journal of Latest Research in Engineering and Computing (IJLREC) International Journal of Law and Legal Jurisprudence Studies (IJllJS)International Journal of Life science and Pharma ResearchInternational Journal of Life Sciences Biotechnology and Pharma Research (IJLBPR) The International Journal of ManagementInternational Journal of Management and Business Studies (IJMBS)International Journal of Management, Economics and Social Sciences (IJMESS) International Journal of Management Research and Business Strategy (IJMRBS) International Journal of Management Sciences and Business Research (IJMSBR) International Journal of Mathematical Research & ScienceInternational Journal of Mathematics and Soft Computing (IJMSC)International Journal of Medical Science and Education (IJMSE)International Journal of Medical Sciences and Health Care (IJMSHC) International Journal of Medical Research & Health Sciences(IJMRHS) International Journal of Medicine and Biomedical ResearchInternational Journal of Medicine and BiosciencesInternational Journal of Medicobiologial ResearchInternational Journal of Modern Engineering Research (IJMER)International Journal of Multidisciplinary and Current Research(IJMCR) International Journal of Multidisciplinary Sciences and Engineering(IJMSE) International Journal of Novel Drug Delivery TechnologyInternational Journal of NursingInternational Journal of Pharma and Bio Sciences (IJPBS)International Journal of Pharmaceutical & Research Science (IJPRS Journal) International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical ResearchInternational Journal of Pharmaceutical and Phytopharmacological Research (eIJPPR) International Journal of Pharmaceutical Research and Development(IJPRD) International Journal of Pharmaceutical Science Invention (IJPSI)International Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Drug ResearchInternational Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Research(IJPSR) International Journal of Pharmacognosy (IJP)International Journal of PharmacyInternational Journal of Pharmacy and Technology (IJPT)International Journal of Plant, Animal and Environmental SciencesInternational Journal of Power Electronics EngineeringInternational Journal of Recent Scientific ResearchInternational Journal of Recent Technology and Engineering (IJRTE)International Journal of Recent Trends in Electrical & Electronics Engineering (IJRTE) International Journal of Research and Innovation in Computer Engineering (IJRICE) International Journal of Research Development (IJORD)International Journal of Research in Aeronautical and Mechanical Engineering (IJRAME) International Journal of Research in Ayurveda and PharmacyInternational Journal of Research in Computer and Communication TechnologyInternational Journal of Research in Computer ScienceInternational Journal of Research in Computer TechnologyInternational Journal of Research in Engineering and Advanced Technology (IJREAT) International Journal of Research in Engineering and ScienceInternational Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology(IJRET)International Journal of Research in Medical and Dental SciencesInternational Journal of Research in Wireless Systems (IJRWS)International Journal of Reviews in ComputingInternational Journal of Science and Advanced Technology (IJSAT)The International Journal of Science & TechnoledgeInternational Journal of Science and ResearchInternational Journal of Science and TechnologyInternational Journal of Science Commerce and Humanities (IJSCH)International Journal of Science Innovations and DiscoveriesInternational Journal of Sciences (IJSciences)International Journal of Scientific & Technology ResearchInternational Journal of Scientific and Engineering Research (IJSER)International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications (IJSRP)International Journal of Scientific Engineering and TechnologyInternational Journal of Scientific ResearchInternational Journal of Scientific Research and Application (IJSRA Publishing)International Journal of Scientific Research in EducationThe International Journal of Social Sciences (TIJOSS)International Journal of Social Sciences and Entrepreneurship(IJSSE)International Journal of Soft Computing and EngineeringInternational Journal of Sport Studies (IJSS)International Journal of Technical Research and Applications (IJTRA)International Journal of Trends in Economics Management and Technology (IJTEMT) International Journal of Universal Pharmacy and Bio Sciences(IJUPBS)International Journal of World ResearchInternational Journal on Recent and Innovation Trends in Computing and Communication (IJRITCC)International Refereed Journal of Engineering and Science (IRJES)International Research Journal of Applied and Basic Sciences(IRJABS)International Research Journal of Applied FinanceInternational Research Journal of Pharmaceutical and Applied Sciences (IRJPAS) International ResearchersInternational Review of Social Sciences and HumanitiesInternational Technical Sciences Journal (ITSJ)Journal der Pharmazie Forschung (RAPSR)Journal of Advances in Internal MedicineJournal of American Physicians and Surgeons (JPANDS)Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences (Nairobi, Kenya)Journal of Applied PharmacyJournal of Applied Pharmaceutical ScienceJournal of Ayurveda and Holistic Medicine (JAHM)Journal of Basic and Clinical Pharmacy [Link dead as of 2013-05-06]Journal of Behavioral Sciences in AsiaJournal of Bio InnovationJournal of Business Management and Applied EconomicsJournal of Business Research (İşletme Araştırmaları Dergisi)0Journal of Chemical and Pharmaceutical SciencesJournal of ComputingJournal of Contemporary Issues in Business ResearchJournal of Coastal Life MedicineJournal of CosmologyJournal of Current Pharma ResearchJournal of Current Trends in Big Data AnalyticsJournal of Emerging Trends in Computing and Information SciencesJournal of ELT and Applied Linguistics (JELTAL)Journal of Environmental HydrologyJournal of Experimental SciencesJournal of Global Research in Computer Science (JGRCS)Journal of International Academic Research for Multidisciplinary(JIARM) Journal of International Environmental Application & ScienceJournal of International Management StudiesJournal of Knowledge Management, Economics and Information Technology Journal of Medical Research and Practice (JMRP)Journal of Multidisciplinary Engineering Science and Technology(JMEST) Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences (JPBMS)Journal of ScienceJournal of Science EditingJournal of Scientific Theory and MethodsJournal of TelecommunicationsKashmir Economic ReviewLingua: International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Culture(Lingua- IJLLC) The Macrotheme ReviewMathematical and Computational Applications (MCA)Modern Behavioral ScienceThe Modern Journal of Applied Linguistics (MJAL)National Journal of Basic Medical SciencesNational Journal of Medical and Dental ResearchOpen Access Journal of Science and TechnologyOriental Journal of Computer Science and TechnologyPattern Recognition in PhysicsPeople’s Journal of Scientific ResearchThe Pharma Research (Journal)PharmacologiaPharmacologyOnline (PhOL)PHARMANEST: An International Journal of Advances in Pharmaceutical SciencesPlant DigestPure and Applied Biology (PAB)Reef Resources Assessment and Management Technical PaperResearchResearch Directions: International Multidisciplinary Research Journal (Research Directions JournalResearch in BiotechnologyResearch Inventy: International Journal of Engineering and ScienceResearch Journal of Pharmaceutical, Biological and Chemical Sciences (RJPBCS)Research RevolutionResearchDeskResearchers World – Journal of Arts Science & CommerceReview of ResearchReviews of ProgressRevista Iberoamericana de CiencasRomanian Biotechnological LettersSci-Afric Journal of Scientific Issues, Research and EssaysScience InternationalScience ParkScience Postprint (SPP)Science Research ReporterScience ReutersScientific WorldSeventh Sense Research Group JournalSouth Asian Journal of MathematicsSwiss Journal of Research in Business and Social Science (SJRBSS)Tactful Management Research Journal (TMRJ)Technics Technologies Education ManagementUniversal Journal of Applied Computer Science and TechnologyUniversal Journal of Computer Science and Engineering Technology (UniCSE)Universal Journal of Pharmacy (UJP Online)Weekly Science International Research JournalWorld Applied Sciences JournalWorld Essays Journal (WEJ)World Journal of Pharmaceutical Research (WJPR)World Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (WJPPS) World Journal of Science and Technology (WJST)。

机械工程学报英语

机械工程学报英语

机械工程学报英语Mechanical Engineering Journal: A Comprehensive ExplorationMechanical engineering is a vast and dynamic field that encompasses the design, development, and optimization of a wide range of mechanical systems and devices. From the intricate mechanisms that power modern industries to the innovative technologies that shape our daily lives, the field of mechanical engineering has been at the forefront of technological advancements. The Mechanical Engineering Journal serves as a platform for the dissemination of cutting-edge research, innovative ideas, and practical solutions that drive the progress of this ever-evolving discipline.At the heart of the Mechanical Engineering Journal lies a commitment to excellence in both research and application. The journal's editorial board, comprised of renowned experts from around the world, meticulously curates a diverse range of articles that cover the breadth and depth of the field. From fundamental principles to groundbreaking applications, the journal's content reflects the multifaceted nature of mechanical engineering, catering to the diverse interests and needs of its readership.One of the key strengths of the Mechanical Engineering Journal is its interdisciplinary approach. The journal recognizes that the boundaries between traditional engineering disciplines are becoming increasingly blurred, as advancements in one field often have significant implications for others. As such, the journal actively encourages the submission of articles that explore the intersections between mechanical engineering and related disciplines, such as materials science, computer science, and energy systems. This cross-pollination of ideas not only enriches the journal's content but also fosters a more comprehensive understanding of the challenges and opportunities facing the mechanical engineering community.The journal's commitment to innovation is evident in the wide range of topics it covers. From the development of advanced manufacturing techniques to the optimization of renewable energy systems, the Mechanical Engineering Journal showcases the latest breakthroughs and emerging trends in the field. Researchers and practitioners alike can find valuable insights and inspiration within the journal's pages, as they strive to push the boundaries of what is possible in mechanical engineering.One particularly noteworthy aspect of the Mechanical Engineering Journal is its dedication to addressing the pressing global challenges of our time. Climate change, resource scarcity, and sustainabledevelopment are just a few of the critical issues that the journal's authors explore through their research and analysis. By highlighting the role of mechanical engineering in addressing these challenges, the journal not only contributes to the advancement of the field but also underscores its vital importance in shaping a more sustainable and equitable future.Moreover, the Mechanical Engineering Journal is committed to fostering a vibrant and collaborative community within the mechanical engineering field. Through its publication of high-quality peer-reviewed articles, the journal provides a platform for researchers and practitioners to share their work, engage in constructive dialogue, and build professional networks. This collaborative spirit is further reinforced by the journal's active participation in international conferences, workshops, and symposia, where the latest ideas and findings are shared and discussed among the global mechanical engineering community.In conclusion, the Mechanical Engineering Journal stands as a testament to the dynamism and significance of the mechanical engineering discipline. By curating a diverse range of cutting-edge research, innovative ideas, and practical solutions, the journal serves as a valuable resource for students, researchers, and professionals alike. As the field of mechanical engineering continues to evolve and tackle the challenges of the 21st century, the Mechanical EngineeringJournal will undoubtedly play a pivotal role in shaping the future of this essential discipline.。

我国商业银行绿色金融创新研究[开题报告]

我国商业银行绿色金融创新研究[开题报告]

毕业论文开题报告题目:我国商业银行绿色金融创新研究一、选题的背景、意义(一)选题的背景从二十世纪90年代以来,中国的金融业经历了一系列的改革和创新运动。

加入WTO以后,金融业逐渐实行全面的对外开放,给外资银行以平等的国民待遇。

外资金融机构的广泛介入、竞争的加剧、金融管制的放松,所有这一切将使我国金融市场进入一个全新的发展时期。

近年来环保形势日益严峻,如何更有效地保护生态环境,更是一个非常紧迫的问题。

在多年行政管理效果不是非常显著的情况下,人们开始将目光转向了银行信贷预期,通过信贷审核过程中对于环境风险的评估,以达到消除高污染、高能耗项目对环境和社会带来的负面影响。

为此,2007年7月12日,国家环保总局、中国人民银行、中国银监会联合发布了《关于落实环保政策法规防范信贷风险的意见》,提出以商业银行绿色金融机制为主要手段来遏制高耗能高污染产业的盲目扩张。

绿色信贷、绿色金融概念的提出,对我国商业银行信贷投放起到了一定的指导作用,但此项工作仍处于起步阶段,相关管理制度还有待完善。

(二)选题的意义构建和谐社会是我国根本的国家发展战略,其中实现人与自然和谐相处则是构建和谐社会的重要内容。

作为社会经济活动的总枢纽,商业银行在引导社会经济资源配置、促进生态建设、实现人与自然和谐相处方面有着义不容辞的责任。

推行和发展商业银行绿色金融,已经成为我国商业银行履行社会责任的核心内容。

实施绿色金融战略有利于商业银行自身的良性发展,因此实施绿色金融战略是构建和谐社会的迫切需要。

二、相关研究的最新成果及动态(一)国外相关研究关于商业银行绿色金融即绿色信贷的研究,国外学者共有以下观点:(1)对于商业银行绿色金融的研究,国外起步较早。

早在20世纪80年代初,绿色金融作为自成体系的立法最早出现于美国《环境应对、赔偿和责任综合法》(简称CERCLA)。

进入20世纪90年代,绿色金融业务在美国进入实质性发展阶段,而世界其他各主要经济体也相继通过具体的金融管理方案支持环境保护事业的发展。

我国绿色经济发展现状与展望

我国绿色经济发展现状与展望
3. 我国绿色经济发展现状
3.1. 绿色产业发展迅猛
近年来,我国绿色产业在相关政策的扶持下迅猛发展。从新能源汽车产业来看,从 2014 年始,新能 源汽车的销量处于稳步上升的过程,2020 年全年我国新能源汽车产销量分别为 136.6 万辆和 136.7 万辆, 累计增长 7.5%和 10.9%,且据前瞻预测,2026 年中国新能源汽车销量将达到 280 万辆左右。从环保产业 来看,废弃资源综合利用企业数呈现出稳定增长的态势,如图 1 所示,同时张芳[10] (2020)指出废弃资源 综合利用企业资产也在逐步增长,2013 年规模以上企业总资产为 1561 亿元,2019 年增长到了 2470 亿元, 说明我国环保产业随着政策扶持,且带来了良好的经济效益和环境效益。赖力[11] (2020)也指出中国近年 来光伏制造、新能源整车制造产能占全球 1/2,且石墨烯材料、微电网等技术也与世界强国并肩。
4.2. 政策工具支撑不足
王兴文等[15]、郑茜楠[16] (2020)表明绿色经济的发展涉及到人才、资金、管理等多方面的问题,不 仅只是规范环境保护这一方面,还与财政税收、绿色金融、产业转型、能源开发等一系列支撑体系紧密 相关,因此需要建立一个系统完整的法律政策体系。目前我国绿色经济发展虽然得到了环境资源等保护 法的保障,但在财税、金融等方面的政策制度支持仍是存在缺陷。如绿色信贷奖惩机制尚未完善,对环 保诚信企业进行信贷以及利率优惠政策支持,而对环保警示企业仅仅限制新增贷款,处罚力度不足,难 以促使企业进行污染治理与技术创新。而我国新能源产业虽然发展迅速,但整体仍需要相关政策的补助 支撑。以新能源汽车产销量为例,2019 年随着新能源汽车补贴政策的逐步退出,产量由 127 万辆下降到 124.2 万辆,销量由 125 万辆下降到 120 万辆。对于新能源产业发展初期,需要系统有力的政策扶持,才 能令其发展壮大,逐步取代传统能源,从而促进绿色经济的发展。

旅游学术期刊投稿地址

旅游学术期刊投稿地址

中外文旅游学术期刊HOSPITALITY RESOURCES(酒店业刊物)∙饭店现代化∙中外饭店∙中国旅游饭店TOURISM RESOURCES(旅游刊物)∙人文地理rwdl@∙旅游学刊中文期刊《旅游学刊》(Tourism Tribune)的ISSN为1002-5006,1986年创刊,由北京联合大学旅游学院主办,是专业学术性刊物,反映旅游业的新动向、新思路、新经验和新问题,以及研究评述、学术会议纪要等。

读者对象为旅游企事业单位管理工作者、旅游院校师生及相关行业的管理人员、科研人员。

(因编辑部每日收稿量巨大,请作者在发送稿件电子版(E-mail投稿)的同时,务必邮寄纸质稿件,本刊E-mail为lyxka@tom.com,邮编和地址是:100101/北京朝阳区北四环东路99号,并请在纸质稿件上注明寄出电子邮件的日期和稿件字数。

)∙旅游科学中文期刊《旅游科学》(Tourism Science)的ISSN 为1006-575X,1981年创刊,由上海旅游高等专科学校主办。

(lykx@)∙旅游论坛中文期刊《旅游论坛》(Journal of Guilin Institute of Tourism)的ISSN 为1008-6080,1989年创刊,桂林旅游高等专科学校主办,曾经使用过的期刊名包括“旅游研究与实践” 和“桂林旅游高等专科学校学报”(gllzbjb@)。

∙旅游管理(原《旅游经济》)∙经济地理moeg5584716@∙中国国家地理∙中国会议及奖励旅游概览∙中国旅游报∙旅游规划与设计《旅游规划与设计》由中国建筑工业出版社与北京大学旅游规划研究中心合作出版,计划每年出版四期。

第一期的主题是旅游•中国•未来,第一期创刊号免费赠送给本次高峰论坛的到场嘉宾。

《旅游规划与设计》将为旅游目的地建设提供理论、技术、经验和思想交流平台,内容涵盖旅游产业发展规划、旅游景观设计与建筑设计、旅游景区管理三大版块。

tpdtourism@HOSPITALITY RESOURCES (酒店业刊物)∙Anatolia: an international journal of tourism and hospitality research∙ASEAN Journal on Hospitality & Tourism∙FIU Hospitality Review∙Hospitality Design: HD∙Hotelier∙International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality management∙International Journal of Hospitality Management∙Journal of Convention & Exhibition Management∙Journal of Foodservice Business Research∙Journal of Foodservice Research International∙Journal of Hospitality & Leisure for the Elderly∙Journal of Hospitality & Leisure Marketing∙Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research∙Journal of Human Resources in Hospitality & Tourism∙Journal of International Academy of Hospitality Research∙Journal of Nutrition for the Elderly∙Journal of Nutrition in Recipe & Menu Development∙Journal of Quality Assurance in Hospitality & Tourism∙Journal of Restaurant & Foodservice Marketing∙Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism∙The Journal of Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism Education (JoHLSTE)∙Tourism & Hospitality ResearchLEISURE & RECREATION RESOURCES (休闲与娱乐刊物)∙Annals of Leisure Research∙Australian Leisure Mangement∙Annual in Therapeutic Recreation∙Countryside Recreation∙Cyber Journal of Applied Leisure and Recreation Research ∙Journal of Leisurability∙Journal of Leisure Research∙Journal of Park & Recreation Administration∙Journal of Recreation and Leisure∙Journal of Retail & Leisure Property∙Journal of the Canadian Association for Leisure Studies∙Leisure & Hospitality Business∙Leisure Sciences∙Leisure Studies∙Managing Leisure∙Parks and Recreation Magazine∙Journal of Vacation Marketing∙Tourism Recreation Research∙Travel & Leisure∙Visions in leisure and business∙World Leisure JournalTOURISM RESOURCES (旅游刊物)∙AAHE Online Journal∙Action Asia∙Annals of Tourism Research∙Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research∙Business Traveller :Asia-Pacific∙Conference & Incentive Travel∙Current Issues in Tourism∙Current Therapeutic Reaearch∙Dateline ASTA∙EuroSlot∙Environmental Ethic∙FVW International∙Human Dimensions of Wildlife∙International Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Administration∙International Journal of Tourism Research∙Journal of Interpretation Research∙Journal of Sport Tourism∙Journal of Sustainable Tourism∙Journal of Teaching in Travel & Tourism∙Journal of Travel & Tourism Marketing∙Journal of Travel Research∙Journal of Vacation Marketing∙Journal of Environmental Psychology∙Journal of Physical Education, Recreation and Dance∙National Parks Magazine∙Park Science∙Tourism Research Journal(TJR)∙Parks and Recreation Magazine∙TEOROS(Revue de recherche en tourisme)∙The Consortium Journal:Journal of HBCU∙the Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change∙Tourist Studies∙The Tourist Review∙Tourism Culture & Communication∙Tourism Economics∙Tourism Geographies∙Tourism Management∙Tourism Today∙Tourismus Journal∙Travel & Tourism Analyst∙Travel Journal/ トラベル· ジャ—ナル∙"Problems of Tourism" - English Edition∙University CA'FOSCARI of Venice Acta TuristicaTRANSPORTATION JOURNALS (交通杂志)∙Transport Policy∙Transportion Law Journal∙World Transport Policy and Practice。

旅游景点可持续发展旅游目的地外文文献翻译2013年译文5100多字

旅游景点可持续发展旅游目的地外文文献翻译2013年译文5100多字

文献出处:Sharpley, Richard. "The research on sustainable development of tourism" [J]Journal o f Sustainable tourism 2013,8(01):9-21原文The research on sustainable development of tourismSharpley, RichardAbstractSustainable development of the ecological environment is closely related to the social and economic development. A good ecological environment is the foundation for survival of the human beings and development, and the objective environment for development of tourism. At present, development of the tourist resources in all places catches equal importance to the economic, social and environmental benefits. With the rapid economic development of our country, however, its conflict against the ecological environment gets aggravated and in some areas, the ecological environment even continues to deteriorate. For many years, tourism has been regarded as the "smoke-free industry". But the negative effect upon the tourist places due to development of tourism has been an indisputable fact. Vigorous advocation of the Central Committee for building a conservation-minded society and developing the cyclic economy symbolizes that China's strategy of sustainable development has ushered in a new stage and sustainable development of the tourist places will surely become an important issue.Travel agencies (tourist team-forming agency) are tourist enterprises comparatively far from the tourist places but most closely linked in economy and information. They exert broad and profound influences directly or indirectly on the tourist places. The influences may be active, including efforts taken to organize thenation-wide ecological tourist activities to attract and guide the market environment of the source visitors, and promote the sustainable development of the tourist places. The influences may be negative, too, if the design of the short-term tourist lines or unhealthy tourist activities to attract large numbers of tourists, which can produce negative effects on the tourist places. This thesis proceeds from the day-to-day businesses of travel agencies to the probe of its active role in sustainable development of the tourist spots and means of controlling the negative influences.Keywords : tourism area, sustainable development, protection of the environment1 IntroductionSustainable development of tourism is a global issue within the tourist circle today. The sustainable development of tourism has been proposed and accepted quickly and widely in time of the rapid expansion and prosperity of the tourist industry when crisis starts to be exposed. People have discovered many new issues, for example, "depletion of tourist resources appears" along the shores of Mediterranean Sea in Europe. Only in such cases can people come to know that adherence to sustainable development is the workable principle for developing tourism. The sustainable development of the tourist places has been regarded as a theory to maintain and enhance the future development opportunity and satisfy the various demands of the present tourists and residents in the tourist spots. Its essence is to integrate tourism with the nature, cultures and the living environment of us human beings, coordinate with and balance the mutual relationships and unify the objectives of economic development with those of social development on a global scale. With the rapid development of tourism, tourists have not only created substantial economic returns for the tourist places but also aggravated the negative effects. How to coordinate the relations between tourist spots and the tourists, strengthen the technical management of the tourists by the tourist departments and try every way to reduce and control the tourists' negative effects upon the tourist places has already become a issuewhich cannot be ignored. Tourists are both the livelihood and service objects of the tourist places. In order to receive a certain quantity of tourists to achieve the economic objectives, develop, protect and publicize the protection of the tourist spots, the tourist places provide the tourists with tourist experiences, accommodation, catering, entertainment and other consumptions in return for economic benefits and economic inflows. But their capacity of self maintenance and self development has been weakened. Tourist spots serve as the media for tourists to experience the tourist targets and satisfy their own physical and spiritual requirements. It is in the tourist atmospheres that the tourists obtain the physical and spiritual pleasure through understanding, appreciation of and participation in various landscapes. Sometimes, there may be opposition between the tourist places and the tourists.2 Influences from the Travel Agencies' Businesses upon the Environment of Tourist placesBusinesses of the travel agencies exert both active and negative effects on the environment of the tourist places and the specific results vary with the related main bodies and interrelations concerning sustainable development of the tourist places. 2. 1 Active EffectsTravel agencies' design of the tourist lines plays a pivotal role in stimulating the economic development of the tourist spots. At the same time, development of the tourist industry can increase the employment and solve the issue related to the surplus laborers. In countries of developed tourism, employment for tourism accounts for 7%~10% of that for the whole country, and in our country, there are more and more people employed into the tourist industry. Tourism can provide job vacancies for more people, especially the non-professional people. Therefore, it plays a special role in development of economy and stability of the society.The travel agencies can organize the inbound tourism to attract foreign visitors to the domestic tourist spots, publicize the tourist images to the whole world, serve as the medium for the local economic development and play an important role in attracting capitals from other areas of our country and foreign countries. The touristdevelopment can promote the local infrastructure construction, optimize the life of the local people, speed up the construction of communications and contribute to the local traffic convenience, and create more favorable health facilities and medical conditions.Travel agencies can design the tourist lines of sustainable development and minimize the damages to the environment so as to maximize the economic benefits, protect the environment, ecological diversification and the living environment for wildlife and prevent the further disruption to the ecological environment.2. 2 Negative EffectsIt is often the case that the travel agencies seek for instant success and quick profits during their business operation, especially in the environment-sensitive regions, where large-scale development of tourism is not scientifically conducted. The developers are too optimistic to realize the latent negative effect from the blind rush for tourist development, only resulting in huge losses and damages to the environment.Too large a size of the tourist team organized by the travel agencies will mean a great pressure to the ecological environment and bring about negative effects to the development of the regional tourism. Visitors are of different backgrounds. They enjoy different awareness and moral consciousness and have different knowledge on environmental protection. If marketers of the travel agencies fail to treat them differently, the part of visitors who lack the awareness of environmental protection may cause great negative effects on the ecological environment. The main results include: depletion of the tourist resources, deterioration of the tourist environment, traffic congestion and over-load bearing reception of tourists, a silent and subtle transforming influence on the value senses, social outlook and morality of the local residents. If no correct guidance is made, the local national cultures and daily life may be externalized, even affecting stability of the social order.3. Operating Strategy of Travel Agencies Based on Sustainable Development of the Tourist Spots3. 1 Strengthen the management of the operating process of travel agenciesTravel agencies, as the intermediate link of visitors' tourist demand to the relevant tourist supplies within the tourist industrial aggregates, are directly connected with the environment, and its ecological orientation exerts a direct influence on the ecological environment of the tourist places. After entry into WTO, travel agencies have taken up the multi-aspect and diversified operation and realized the transition from intermediaries to enterprise entities. In such a trend, travel agencies will take more frequent participation into the environment and the influence from their ecological orientations on the environmental changes will increase, too. Moreover, travel agencies' ecological orientations serve as a guide to the tourists' behaviors, attitudes of the local residents and the business operating orientations of tourist enterprises. Therefore, sustainable development of the industry of tourism should start with efforts by the travel agencies. The marketing concept of sustainable development for travel agencies is to build up the friendly properties towards the ecological environment during the operating process based on the guiding ideology of ecologicalization. On the basis of this concept, marketing of the travel agencies should attach great importance to the sustainable management of the marketing concept, design of products and process management.Using the feeling of tourist well-being achieved by individual tourists we evaluate indirectly the competitive ability of the tourist area to offer a compound tourist site attractiveness. The methodology employed here uses individual survey questionnaires on the tourists' evaluation of the quality of tourist facilities and attributes in a given area (the ‘regional tourist profile’) as the basis for constructing an aggregate expression for the relative attractiveness of that area. Using various multidimensional statistical techniques an estimation of the competitive attractiveness of the Southern regions in Italy is pursued. We also compare our findings with quantitative results on tourist competitiveness values obtained in a related previous study on tourist competitiveness in Italian regions. Finally, the paper highlights the need to use micro and macro data to analyse tourist attractiveness and to identify policies for improving regional tourist competitiveness.Besides satisfying the visitors' requirements, travel agencies should also strengthen their management of the tourist behaviors. Before the normal start of tourist activities, travel agencies should take up pre-tour education to the visitors, including their codes of conducts for and matters needing attention to sustainable tourism, environmental policies, laws and regulations of the tourist spots, cautions for getting along properly with the local residents, and respect of others' privacy and dignity.Upon completion of the tourist activities, the travel agencies should conclude the experience and subsequent influence of the whole tourist process on the future visitors. After the tourist activities are over, the travel agencies should make timely summaries, accumulate good experience, analyze the successes and advocate them in the future work. Meanwhile, it is necessary to find out the weaknesses and improve them in the future tourist activities. On the other hand, travel agencies can seek feedback information from the visitors, including their experience during the tour, their comments on whether or not the tour is properly organized, whether or not the tourist purposes have been realized and whether or not they have been inspired or learned something during the tourist activities. For visitors engaged in sustainable tours, when they return to their real life, the education on environmental protection and ecological knowledge they have received during the tour will surely influence their life styles, working attitude and way of act. Generally, they pay more attention to protection of the environment and stimulate people around them with their oral publicity and practical actions to support and participate in protection of the environment so that the force for environmental protection will continue to expand, contributing to the promotion of awareness of environmental protection of the whole society.The travel agencies should strengthen their relations with the communities of the tourist places, win their supports to and understanding of the sustainable development of tourism. Local people of greater influences may be employed as tour guides of sustainable development so that visitors can both enjoy the beautiful sceneries of the nature and get better melted into the local cultural atmosphere. In this way, the tourist places of sustainable development will also serve as a beautiful classroom wherevisitors can improve their ecological awareness.The tourist product of sustainable development is only one of the many tourist products operated by the travel agencies. Travel agencies should not only give emphasis to protection of the environment when operating the tourist product of sustainable development but also attach awareness of environmental protection to other tourist products so that visitors who have not purchased the tourist product of sustainable development can also receive education on environmental protection and more and more people will join in the environmental forces and have sustainable tourist development deep-rooted in their mind.3.2 Promote the Awareness of Internal Employees in Environmental ProtectionThe travel agencies must offer overall education to their internal employees so that they can understand and master the tourist thoughts of sustainable development. Employees of the travel agencies must be first armed up with overall technical knowledge because this is the foundation for them to improve the visitors' quality of tourist experience. Second, tourist employees, especially those in direct contact with the visitors, should learn the science of public relations and communicate with the visitors correctly. They should share the awareness of environmental protection, understand the local conditions and situations and be familiar with the contents of sustainable development and their implementation. At the same time, they should know how to guide the visitors to minimize the negative effect to the environment during their tour.Discretionary time consumption has become an important activity for many people in a modern welfare society. As a consequence, the leisure sector has become a prominent economic industry in the Western world. The rise in disposable income and in free time in recent decades has created the foundation for a new lifestyle, where recreation and tourism have become major elements of consumer behaviour. Today, in many regions and countries, tourism is regarded as one of the major growth industries that deserve due policy attention. Clearly, tourism has become a global socio-economic phenomenon in a mobile world.The new trend in modern tourism towards non-traditional and remotedestinations is likely an expression of the passage from mass tourism to a new age of tourism, and illustrates a change in the attitudes and needs of many tourists towards tailor-made tourist facilities ([Fayos–Solà, 1996] and [Poon, 1993]). Nowadays, isolated or previously unknown destinations have become places to be explored, since they meet the tourists' expectations: namely, a unique or special leisure experience based on a specific tourist destination profile.A tourist destination (e.g. city, region or site) is at present often no longer seen as a set of distinct natural, cultural, artistic or environmental resources, but as an overall appealing product available in a certain area: a complex and integrated portfolio of services offered by a destination that supplies a holiday experience which meets the needs of the tourist. A tourist destination thus produces a compound package of tourist services based on its indigenous supply potential. This may also create fierce competition between traditional destinations seeking to maintain and expand their market share and new destinations that are trying to acquire a significant and growing market share. The success of tourist destinations thus depends on their regional tourist competitiveness in terms of the attractiveness characteristics (or quality profile) that make up the tourist strength of a certain area (see also [Agrawal, 1997], [Butler, 1980] and [Hovinen, 2002]).The dynamic nature of tourist channel competition requires destinations to be able to combine and manage their tourist resources in order to gain competitive advantage (see Teece, Pisano, & Shuen, 1997). The new needs of tourists impose destinations constantly to reconfigure, gain, and dispose of attractive resource able to meet the demand of a shifting market. This has led to the concept of dynamic capabilities; viz. organisation's processes (in our case tourist destination) that “integrate, reconfigure, gain and release resources to match and even create market change” (Eisenhardt & Martin, 2000: p. 1107).In the tourist field competition among territorial areas is usually not centred on the single aspects of the tourist product (environmental resources, transportation, tourism services, hospitality, etc.), but on the tourist destination as an integrated and compound set of tourist facilities for the clientTherefore, employees of the travel agencies must receive the training on awareness of environmental protection. First, either the administrators or the ordinary employees must build up their long-term concept of sustainable development, exercise their obligation of preservation of the ecological environment and promote the coordinated development of ecology with economy. Second, the resource-friendly sense of value must be established because for the travel agencies, uncontrolled consumption of tourist resources today means the loss of a foundation for enterprise development tomorrow. Third, build up the legal concept of environmental protection and consciously regulate the enterprise behaviors with laws and regulations. Fourth, establish the moral concept of environmental protection. The Central Government has already brought environmental protection into the category of socialist ideological and ethical progress. Modern tourist enterprises should perform their social responsibility, conscientiously abide by the social morality and endeavor to advocate the advanced cultures of our country. Only on basis of the above concepts can the travel agencies usher in harmonious development with the society and environment.3.3 Guide the Visitors in Protection of the EnvironmentDuring the design of tourist products, the travel agencies should fully listen to the opinions of the regional ecological researchers and the natural protecting bodies. It is better to employ the local people to operate the hotels and visitors should be suggested not purchasing the local and special products which may affect the natural environment. Guide the visitors to communicate properly with the local people and organize various public benefit activities conducive to protection of the ecological environment. If we want more people to support the environmental protection, the tour guide should be an environmentalist. Tour guides should use their rich ecological and environmental knowledge to influence and educate the visitors to tour happily through the beautiful sceneries, tourist knowledge and social responsibility.There should be the concept of guiding the visitor to protect the nature. Designers of the tour (travel agencies and design bodies) should share clear ecological concepts and the tour leaders and guides should educate the visitors timely in protection of the environment. Selection of different tour lines will exert differentinfluences on the bearing capacity of the resource environment (for example, avoid the tour peak time). Therefore, travel agencies should select tourist places with conditions for ecological tours and avoid the fragile and sensitive ecological regions. The number of visitors for each team must be controlled within the acceptable scope. Effective management can be conducted more easily of the smaller tour groups and reduce the artificial affections and damages to the ecological environment.ConclusionDevelopment of tourism must be based on the bearing capacity of the ecological environment and agree with the economic conditions and social morality of the tour places. Sustainable development is a guiding method for overall management of the resources for the purpose of preventing various resources from being damaged and protecting the natural and cultural resources. With the overall development of economy and tourism, the travel agencies are playing a more and more prominent role in their intermediary functions, especially their connections of the tourist places with the tourist sources. Therefore, the travel agencies should assume their due responsibility in the sustainable development of and benefit from the regional tourism so as to realize the sustainable development of both the tourist products and the images of the travel agencies.译文旅游景点可持续发展研究夏普利·理查德摘要生态环境的可持续发展与社会经济发展息息相关,良好的生态环境既是人类赖以生存的环境和发展的源泉,同时也是旅游业发展的客观环境。

中考英语阅读理解词义猜测上下文线索单选题40题

中考英语阅读理解词义猜测上下文线索单选题40题

中考英语阅读理解词义猜测上下文线索单选题40题1.In the story, the word "gloomy" most probably means _.A.happyB.sadC.angryD.excited答案:B。

解析:在故事中,如果看到描述的场景比较沉闷、氛围不好等,通常可以推断“gloomy”是悲伤、沉闷的意思。

选项A“happy”是开心,与“gloomy”意思完全相反;选项C“angry”是生气,与“gloomy”的意思不同;选项D“excited”是兴奋,也不符合“gloomy”的含义。

2.The word "furious" in the passage could be replaced by _.A.calmB.angryC.happyD.surprised答案:B。

解析:从文章中可以看出有一些让人生气的事情发生,所以“furious”最可能是生气的意思。

选项A“calm”是平静,与“furious”完全相反;选项C“happy”是开心,与“furious”意思不同;选项D“surprised”是惊讶,不符合“furious”的含义。

3.The word "cheerful" in the text is closest in meaning to _.A.sadB.angryC.happyD.tired答案:C。

解析:“cheerful”通常表示愉快、高兴的状态。

选项A“sad”是悲伤,与“cheerful”相反;选项B“angry”是生气,与“cheerful”不同;选项D“tired”是疲惫,与“cheerful”意思不相关。

4.The word "miserable" in the story means _.A.happyB.sadC.angryD.excited答案:B。

解析:从故事的描述中可以感受到不好的氛围,“miserable”通常表示痛苦、悲惨、难过,所以是悲伤的意思。

哈工大管理学院高水平国际期刊(A类期刊)列表(2018版)

哈工大管理学院高水平国际期刊(A类期刊)列表(2018版)

哈工大管理学院高水平国际期刊(A类期刊)列表(2018年1月修订更新)A+期刊A1期刊(Business Week, FT列表期刊中未列入我院A+列表的期刊)[1]Accounting, Organizations and Society[2]Contemporary Accounting Research[3]Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice[4]Human Relations[5]Human Resource Management (US)[6]Journal of Applied Psychology[7]Journal of Business Venturing[8]Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis[9]Journal of Management[10]Journal of Management Information Systems[11]Journal of Management Studies[12]Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science[13]Organization Studies[14]Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes[15]Research Policy[16]Review of Accounting Studies[17]Review of Finance[18]The Quarterly Journal of Economics[19]The Review of Economic Studies[20]Harvard Business Review[21]Journal of Business Ethics[22]Journal of Consumer Psychology[23]Sloan Management Review[24]Strategic Entrepreneurship JournalA2期刊澳大利亚管理学院院长联合会管理学期刊列表期刊的A*类期刊,除去我院A+与A1类期刊;英国商学院协会出版的高质量学术期刊指南(ABS Academic Journal Quality Guide 2018)4*/4评级期刊;Thomson Reuters的JCR期刊分区Q1评级期刊;中科院JCR期刊分区1区期刊。

journal of sustainable development

journal of sustainable development

V ol. 2, No. 2 Journal of Sustainable DevelopmentPump vs. Ground Source Heat PumpRuqun WuOEPFaculty of Land and Environment, The University of MelbourneVictoria 3010, AustraliaTel: 61-43-371-3541 E-mail: r.wu6@.auAbstractHeat pump deserves the name of eco-innovation. It uses ‘free energy’ - warmth collected in the soil or in the air to provide heating and cooling. There are two main types of heat pumps – air source heat pump and ground source heat pump. How do they work? What are the benefits of each system? How do they compare? First of all, questions like “what is heat pump, how does it work, what are ASHPs and GSHPs” will be answered. Then a detailed comparison between ASHPs and GSHPs will be carried out, from technological parameters to social, practical, economical parameters. Finally, the conclusions are drawn from these parameters as to decide which kind of heat pump is better off under different conditions.Keywords: Heat pump, Efficiency, Air Source Heat Pump, Ground Source Heat PumpNomenclatureQ e: condensation heat rate, kJ s-1Q c: evaporation heat rate, kJ s-1W: compressor input energy, kWCOP: coefficient of performance˙m: mass flow rate, kg s-1h: enthalpy, kJ kg-1˙Q: the rate of heat transfer, kJ s-1U c/e A c/e: overall heat transfer coefficient of condenser / evaporator, kW o C-1K: constant, equals U e A e / U c A c.T c: temperature in cold region(heat source), o CT h: temperature of warm region (heat sink), o CT re: temperature of refrigerant in evaporator, o CT rc: temperature of refrigerant in condenser, o CT eout: temperature of outlet fluid in evaporator, o CT cout: temperature of outlet fluid in condenser, o C1. IntroductionThe physical law tells us that heat normally flows from a warmer medium to a colder one. But can we move heat from our cooler house and dump it to a higher outside environment in summer? And can we extract heat from a lower temperature outside, to our warmer rooms in winter? The answer is yes if we use a heat pump. The heat pump does so by essentially “pumping” heat up the temperature scale, transferring it from a cold material to a warmer one by adding energy, usually in the form of electricity. The most common type of heat pump is the air-source heat pump, which transfers heat between indoor and the outside air. Ground Source heat pumps (GSHPs) have been in use since late 1940s, they use the constant temperature of the earth as the exchange medium instead of the outside air temperature.14Journal of Sustainable Development July, 20092. Background2.1 Heat PumpsHeat pumps (vapor compression heat pumps) transfer heat by circulating a phase changing substance called a refrigerant through a cycle of evaporation and condensation (Figure 1).A compressor pumps the refrigerant between two heat exchanger coils. In one coil, the refrigerant is evaporated at low pressure and absorbs heat from heat source, the refrigerant is then compressed en route to the other coil, where it condenses at high pressure, at this point, it releases the heat it absorbed earlier in the cycle to the heat sink(NRCOEE,2004,p.4).Figure 1. Basic Vapor Compression CycleSource: NRCOEE (Natural Resources’ Canada Office of Energy Efficiency), 2004, p.42.2 Energy Balance and Efficiency of Heat PumpsFrom the laws of thermodynamic, the Energy Balance of a heat pump system is:Q c = Q e + W ①Where Q e is the heat absorption rate by the evaporator and Q c is the heat given off at the condenser (Figure 1).The operating temperatures of the vapor-compression refrigeration cycle are established by the temperature T c to be maintained in the cold region and the temperature T h of the warm region to which heat is discharged; the refrigerant temperature in the evaporator must be less than T c and the refrigerant temperature in the condenser must be greater than T h to allow heat transferring (Figure 2).Figure 2a. Vapor-compression refrigeration cycle: T-S diagramSource: Refrig. Lab of Queen’s University,2007, p.915V ol. 2, No. 2 Journal of Sustainable Development16 Figure 2b. Vapor-compression refrigeration cycle: ln(p)-h diagramSource:Rademacher,2005, p.70As fluids pass through evaporator and condenser, which are two heat exchangers that exchange heat between refrigerant and surrounding fluids. The rate of heat transfer from refrigerant to the surrounding fluid in condenser and the rate of heat transfer from surrounding fluid to the refrigerant in evaporator can be expressed by ˙Q:˙Q = ˙m *Δ h = U AΘLMT②Here ˙m is the mass flow rate of refrigerant, Δ h is the enthalpy change of refrigerant, U is termed the overall heat transfer coefficient, A is the area of the surface separating the fluids through which the heat transfer occurs and ΘLMT is the mean differences between the temperatures of the two fluids.The classic parameter that has been used to describe the performance of a heat pump is the coefficient of performance(COP), which is the ratio of the quantity of heat transferred to the heat sink (useful energy output) to the quantity of work driving the compressor (total energy input)(Reynolds 1977, pp. 287-289).COP = Q cW =Q cQ c -Q e=11- Q e / Q c③3. Air Source Heat PumpsAir Source Heat Pumps are the most widely used heat pump nowadays, ambient air is free and widely available, and it is the most common heat source for heat pumps.In an air-to-air heat pump system, heat is removed from indoor air and rejected to the outside of a building during the cooling cycle, while the reverse happens during the heating cycle (Figure 3).Figure 3. ASHP - Split systemSource: EERE(Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy),2008aFor application, ASHP is typically roof top units either completely packaged or split packaged systems. Split package heat pumps are designed with an air handling unit located inside the conditioned space while the condenser and compressor are packaged for outdoor installation on the roof. Packaged systems usually have both coils and the fan outdoors. Heated or cooled air is delivered to the interior from ductwork that protrudes through a wall or roof (EERE,2008).Journal of Sustainable Development July, 2009In reality, the capacity and performance of air-source heat pumps decrease rapidly with decreasing ambient temperature during heating season, and with increasing ambient temperature during cooling season. Especially over extended periods of sub-freezing temperatures, as the air source temperature drops below 4o C there is potential for the evaporators to suffer performance degradation due to ice formation(Lu Aye,2003).Nonetheless, compared with conventional heating methods, an ASHP has following benefits:-Typically draws approximately 1/3 to 1/4 of the electricity of a standard electrical heating for the same amount of heating, reducing utility bills and greenhouse gas emissions accordingly (HyperPhysics 2005).-Typical COP of an ASHP is about 200%-400% compares to 100% for a resistance heater and 70-95% for a fuel-powered boiler (HyperPhysics 2005).-As an electric system, no flammable or potentially asphyxiating fuel is used at the point of heating, reducing the potential danger to users, and removing the need to obtain gas or fuel supplies except for electricity (HyperPhysics 2005).4. Ground Source Heat PumpsLike any heat pumps, ground source heat pumps are able to heat, cool the house. Although public awareness of this beneficial technology is low, GSHPs in fact have been in commercial use for over 50 years. The first successful demonstration of GHPs occurred back in 1946, at the Commonwealth Building in Portland, Oregon(Stuebi 2000).4.1 Components of GSHP Systems-The Earth Connection:The earth connection transfers heat into or out of the ground or water body. It often takes the form of an outdoor heat exchanger. This is a coil or pipe carrying water, an antifreeze mixture, or another heat transfer fluid. It may be buried in the ground, in which case it is called a ground-coupled system, or submerged in a lake or pond, in which case it is called a surface water system(NRC(Natural Resources Canada),2008).-A Heat Pump:This is the heart of a GSHP Systems, they operates according to the same principle as conventional heat pumps. All the components of the heat pump are typically housed in a single enclosure which includes the earth connection-to-refrigerant heat exchanger, the compressor, controls, the fan, an air filter, an air handler, and refrigerant-to-air heat exchanger(NRC,2008).-The Interior Heating or Cooling Distribution System:The distribution system is needed for distributing heating and cooling inside the building. GSHP systems typically use conventional ductwork to distribute hot or cold air and to provide humidity control(NRC,2008).4.2 Types of Ground Source Heat Pump SystemsThere are different ways to categorize GSHPs. Depending on the “heat source/sink”, they are either from earth or water. When it uses earth as heat source/sink, the earth connection could be either horizontal or vertical, and they are both closed-loop. When it uses water as heat source/sink, it could be closed-loop or open-loop (Fig 4).-Horizontal (Closed-Loop)This type of installation is generally most cost-effective for residential installations, particularly for new construction where sufficient land is available(EERE,2008b). It requires trenches at least four feet deep(EERE,2008b).-Vertical (Closed-Loop)Vertical systems are used when land area required for horizontal loops would be prohibitive or the soil is too rocky for trenching, they are widely used for large buildings(NRC,2008). Although it requires less surface area, it requires much deeper trenches than horizontal loops(NRC,2008).-Pond/Lake (Closed-Loop)A closed pond loop is not as common, it uses water as heat source/sink(NRC,2008). If the site has an adequate water body, this may be the lowest cost option (EERE,2008b).-Open-Loop System (Open-Loop)An open loop system pulls water directly from a well, lake, or pond. Water is pumped from one of these sources into the heat pump, where heat is either extracted or added and the water is then pumped back into the ground or source body of water(SEW(Shanky Engineering Works),2008). This type was the first to appear on the market, is the simplest to install, and has been used successfully for decades(NRC,2008). However, environmental regulations and insufficient water availability may limit its use in some areas(NRC,2008).17V ol. 2, No. 2 Journal of Sustainable Development18Figure 4. Types of Ground Source Heat Pump SystemsSource: EERE 2008b5. Comparisons5.1 EfficiencyFrom equation ②, Qe Qc = U e A e ΘLMT e U c A c ΘLMT cFor simplification, ΘLMT can be substituted by (ΔTin+ΔTout)/2, where ΔTin is the inlet temperature difference andΔTout is the outlet temperature difference (Figure 5 and Figure 6).Figure 5. Heat exchange in Condenser Figure 6. Heat exchange in EvaporatorJournal of Sustainable Development July, 200919Assuming that refrigerant temperature in condenser and evaporator are constant, the inlet fluid temperature inevaporator is T c and that in condenser is T h.Q e Q c = U e A e (ΔT ein +ΔT eout ) U c A c (ΔT cin +ΔT cout ) = U e A e (T c - T re + T eout - T re ) U c A c (T rc - T h + T rc - T cout ) = K (T c - T re + T eout - T re ) (T rc - T h + T rc - T cout )④ Where T c is the temperature in cold region(heat source), T h is the temperature of warm region (heat sink); T re is therefrigerant temperature in evaporator, T rc is the refrigerant temperature in condenser; T eout is the fluid outlet temperaturein evaporator and T cout is the fluid outlet temperature in condenser; K is a constant, equals U e A e / U c A c .To compare between ASHP and GSHP in winter, it is assumed that except T c, all other parameters are the same for theASHP and the GSHP.GSHP has higher T c than ASHP because ground has dampening effect on temperature variation (see Appendix 1), thenby using equation ④, we can see that Q e /Q c of GSHP is higher than that of ASHP. Also by equation ③, we see thatCOP is directly proportional to Q e /Q c , thus, GSHP has higher efficiency than ASHP.Furthermore, in the vertical configuration of GSHP, the heat exchanger is buried deeper in the ground, where, as we cansee, temperature is more stable year-round. In contrast, the heat exchanger of the horizontal configuration is near thesurface ground and is therefore influenced by atmospheric temperature. As a result, the vertical exchanger permits theheat pump to operate most efficiently.5.2 Design Criteria- Pre-construction study (feasibility study)ASHPs do not incur any civil ground works for the installation and lying of pipe.GSHPs need investigation of the soil or groundwater conditions and it is an important part of a feasibility study. Forground coupled systems, soil conditions will influence not only the feasibility of drilling and trenching, but also theperformance of the earth connection. Similarly, ground water availability, and regulations concerning its use, willdetermine the feasibility of a groundwater earth connection.But for GSHPs, building designers have much greater flexibility. Architects are not faced with the prospect ofunattractive HVAC equipment on rooftops, and can consequently employ a wider variety of roof types (such as slopedroofs)(Stuebi 2000).- Construction Difficulty IndexFor ASHPs, it is very simple to install but for GSHPs, since earth connections in a GSHP system are usually verydifficult to reach after installation, the materials and workmanship must be of the highest quality, which in some cases,may block the application of GSHPs.5.3 Cost- Installation costASHPs has a much lower installation cost than GSHPs (see Appendix 2).And cost for different GSHP types also varies(see Appendix 2).- Operation CostDue to high efficiency and high heating/cooling capacity of GSHP, GSHPs can save owners’ operational cost byreducing energy cost significantly (see Appendix 3).- Maintenance CostGSHPs have a stable geology environment, not affected by such climate disasters like snows, hailstorm, Typhoon etc,while ASHPs are vulnerable to the external environment and thus require more maintenance cost.- Life Cycle CostOverall, GSHPs has a much lower LCC than ASHPs (see Appendix 4).5.4 EnvironmentEnvironmentally, GSHP represent a superior alternative in many aspects. Lower refrigerant charges and reducedleakage when compared to air-source systems are two advantages they share over these systems(Phetteplace 2007). Andsince they use less energy, they produce less CO 2, SO 2, NOx emissions indirectly (see Appendix 4). But GSHPs cancause land disturbance when ground-coupled system is implemented and water contamination problems if watersource/sink is used.V ol. 2, No. 2 Journal of Sustainable Development20 5.5 ReliabilityThe expected lifespan of an ASHP is 15 years(EERE (2001) p.3). Dr. Gordon Bloomquist of Washington StateUniversity observes that GSHP installations dating back from the mid-1950’s “are still providing a high level of serviceto building owners”, and suggests that “system reliability of 25-30 years is easily attainable if routine maintenanceprocedures are followed”(Stuebi 2000).In conclusion, the comparison between ASHPs and different types of GSHPs are listed below:Table 1. Comparison between ASHPs and different types of GSHPs ASHPs GSHPsVertical Horizontal Open-waterEfficiency√ √√√ √√ √√ Design CriteriaFeasibility √√ √ √ √ Construction Difficulty √ √√√ √√ √√ Life Cycle Cost Installation√ √√√ √√ √√ Operation√√ √ √ √ Maintenance√√ √ √ √ Total√√ √ √ √ Environmental CO2 Emissions√√ √ √ √ Land Disturbanceno √√ √ √ Water Contaminationno no no √ Durability√ √√ √√ √√ Practical Issues Operating restrictions√√ √ √ √ Aesthetics√ √√ √√ √√ Quietness√ √√√ √√√ √√√ Vandalism√ no no noIndoor Comfortability√ √√ √√ √√ Safety √√ √√ √√ √√ Note: The more √ means more efficient, more feasible, more difficult, higher cost, longer durability, more restrictions,more beautiful, quieter, more comfortable, and much safer.6. ConclusionsThrough the detailed comparisons between GSHP and ASHP, we can see that GSHP has several advantages over ASHPfrom following aspects: higher efficiency; lower life cycle cost; lower impact on environment; better reliability andother practical convenience.GSHP is recommended to be considered a priority choice under new construction, especially for large buildings wherethe upfront cost is not a pressure to the owners and good qualified construction team is available; the local climateindicating large seasonal variation in temperature; with feasible soil or water condition.Nonetheless, ASHP are suited if customer’s criteria for cost-effectiveness is depending on short payback periods; thelocal climate is mild; or there is difficulties in earth connection.Last but not least, no matter air source or ground source heat pump, they are far more efficient, environmental friendlythan conventional heating/cooling systems. And under the current trends, with a global focus on climate change andenergy resources depletion, heat pumps are one of the most potential green technologies.ReferencesConsumers' Research Magazine. (1999). “Geothermal Heat Pumps: Savings in Long Run.”Consumers' ResearchMagazine Mar 01, 1999 82: 27-30.EERE(Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy). (2001). Federal Energy Management Program. “How to buy anenergy efficient ground-source heat pump.” /femp/pdfs/groundsource_heatpumps.pdfJournal of Sustainable Development July, 2009EERE(Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy), US Department of Energy. (2008a). "Air-Source Heat Pumps."Retrieved March 25th, 2008, from /consumer/your_home/space_heating_cooling/index.cfm/mytopic=12620.EERE(Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy), US Department of Energy. (2008b). "Types of Geothermal HeatPump Systems." Retrieved March 25th, 2008, from/consumer/your_home/space_heating_cooling/index.cfm/mytopic=12650.HyperPhysics. (2005). "Heat Pump Notes." HyperPhysics, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Georgia StateUniversity, Retrieved March 25, 2008, from /hbase/thermo/heatpump.html#c5.Kreith, F. and D. Y. Goswami. (2007). Handbook of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, CRC.Lu Aye and and W. W. S. Charters. (2003). "Electrical and engine driven heat pumps for effective utilisation ofrenewable energy resources" Applied Thermal Engineering Volume 23, Issue 10, pp.1295-1300NRC(Natural Resources Canada). (2008). “Ground-Source Heat Pump Project Analysis - Speaker's notes.” retrievedApril 1st from /ang/speakers_notes_ground_source_heat_pump_project_analysis.phpNRCOEE (Natural Resources’ Canada Office of Energy Efficiency). (2004). “Heating and Cooling With a Heat Pump.”,Natural Resources Canada's Office of Energy Efficiency.http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/publications/infosource/pub/home/heating-heat-pump/booklet.pdfPhetteplace, G. (2002) Vertical ground-coupled heat exchanger test requirements. Hanover, NH: Cold RegionsResearch and Engineering Laboratory. ERDC/CRREL LR-02-66.Phetteplace, G. (2007). "Geothermal Heat Pumps." Journal of Energy Engineering 133(1): 32-38.Radermacher, R. and Y. Hwang. (2005). “Chapter 3 Vapor Compression Cycle Fundamentals” in “Vapor compressionheat pumps with refrigerant mixtures”, Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis.Refrig. Lab of Queen’s University. (2007). “Notes on Vapor-Compression Refrigeration”, Lecture notes by Queen'sUniversity. http://me.queensu.ca/courses/MECH398/RefrigerationLabSLDS.pdf.Reynolds, W. C., and Perkins, H. C. (1977). Engineering Thermodynamics, published by McGraw-Hill, New York.SEW(Shanky Engineering Works),2008 “Geothermal Heat Pump” retrieved April 1st from/More_About3.htm.Stuebi, R. T. (2000). “Geothermal Heat Pumps: Green for Your Wallet, Green for Our Planet.” Renewable EnergiesConference. November 29, 2000, Denver.AppendixesAppendix 1 Soil TemperatureThe figure below shows soil temperatures recorded from heat pump demonstration projects conducted at Ft. Polk,La.( Phetteplace 2002). It’s clear from that the soil temperature does not vary significantly over the annual cycle belowa depth of about 1.8 m(6 ft)21V ol. 2, No. 2 Journal of Sustainable Development22 Appendix 2 Installation Cost ComparisonsAs depicted below, GSHP has much higher installation cost than ASHP(US$4,430), with vertical type thehighest(US$8,997).Total Installed Cost for GSHP Systems by Type Average Loop Costs by GSHP SystemSource: (Kreith and Goswami 2007)Appendix 3 Operation Cost comparisonCase Study 1: The following data were developed for three U.S. locations with widely different climate. The values shown are annual kilowatt hours(KWh) consumption for the different system types-conventional, air-source heat pump(ASHP), single and variable speed(v.s.) and geothermal or ground source, heat pump(GHP), standard and high efficiency(Consumers' Research Magazine, 1999).Cooling(KWh)Heating(KWh) DHW(KWh) Total(KWh) Atlanta,GAASHP 3409 7369 4120 14925ASHP(v.s.)2499 5540 4120 12159 GHP(std.eff.)2598 4236 2620 9455 GHP(higheff.)2079 3510 2509 8098 Spokane,WAASHP 773 11475 4120 16458ASHP(v.s.)435 9295 4120 13850 GHP(std.eff.)451 5562 3150 9163 Portland,ORASHP 513 6666 4120 11299ASHP(v.s.)285 4706 4120 9111 GHP(std.eff.)337 3549 4468 7354 Source: (Consumers' Research Magazine, 1999)Journal of Sustainable Development July, 200923Appendix 4 Life Cycle AnalysisCase Study 2: Engineers determined that the 20-year life-cycle costs of a GHP system for a new elementary school in Nebraska could be $200-400 thousand lower than three other more conventional HVAC options(Stuebi, 2000), the result shows that either considering from LCC or emissions, the GSHP(red one) is superior to other choices for theschool:Life Cycle Cost Life Cycle EmissionsSource (Stuebi 2000)。

浅谈生活节水存在的问题及措施

浅谈生活节水存在的问题及措施

Sustainable Development 可持续发展, 2021, 11(3), 255-261Published Online May 2021 in Hans. /journal/sdhttps:///10.12677/sd.2021.113029浅谈生活节水存在的问题及措施孙小梅1,2,3,4,5,张海欧1,2,3,4,5,花东文1,2,3,4,5,魏彬萌1,2,3,4,51陕西省土地工程建设集团有限责任公司,陕西西安2陕西地建土地工程技术研究院有限责任公司,陕西西安3自然资源部退化及未利用土地整治工程重点实验室,陕西西安4陕西省土地整治工程技术研究中心,陕西西安5自然资源部土地工程技术创新中心,陕西西安收稿日期:2021年2月22日;录用日期:2021年3月22日;发布日期:2021年3月31日摘要水资源短缺严重影响了我国城镇居民的日常生活,阻碍了工业和农业的发展。

我国城镇居民的生活用水浪费严重,生活节水潜力很大。

本文主要提出了生活节水方面存在的问题,以及针对问题提出了生活节水的对策,归纳起来可分为政策、行政、法律、经济、技术和教育等六个方面。

技术手段是实现生活节水最有效、最直接的办法,经济手段在生活节水中也扮演重要的角色,政策、行政、法律和教育对策等也是保障和促进生活节水的必要措施。

关键词水资源,生活节水,问题,措施Discussion on the Problems andMeasures of DomesticWater SavingXiaomei Sun1,2,3,4,5, Haiou Zhang1,2,3,4,5, Dongwen Hua1,2,3,4,5, Binmeng Wei1,2,3,4,51Shaanxi Provincial Land Engineering Construction Group Co., Ltd., Xi’an Shaanxi2Institute of Land Engineering and Technology, Shaanxi Provincial Land Engineering Construction Group Co., Ltd., Xi’an Shaanxi3Key Laboratory of Degraded and Unused Land Consolidation Engineering, Ministry of Natural Resources, Xi’an Shaanxi4Shaanxi Provincial Land Consolidation Engineering Technology Research Center, Xi’an Shaanxi5Land Engineering Technology Innovation Center, Ministry of Natural Resources, Xi’an Shaanxi孙小梅 等Received: Feb. 22nd , 2021; accepted: Mar. 22nd , 2021; published: Mar. 31st, 2021AbstractThe shortage of water resources has seriously affected our daily life of urban residents, hindering the development of industry and agriculture. China’s living water of urban residents waste se-riously, life water-saving has great potential. This paper mainly presents the existence of life sav-ing problems, and puts forward some countermeasures of water saving, concluding six aspects of policy, administration, law, economy, technology and education. Technology is the most effective means of living water, the most direct way to achieve ,Economic means also plays an important role in living water-saving. Policy, administrative, legal and educational countermeasure is the necessary measures to safeguard and promote living water saving.KeywordsWater Resources, Living Water-Saving, Problem, MeasureCopyright © 2021 by author(s) and Hans Publishers Inc. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). /licenses/by/4.0/1. 引言随着社会经济的持续发展和人民生活水平的不断提高,城市对水资源的需求越来越大。

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斯德哥尔摩皇家海港城:一个世界级的可持续发展城市更新典范案例

斯德哥尔摩皇家海港城:一个世界级的可持续发展城市更新典范案例

斯德哥尔摩皇家海港城:一个世界级的可持续发展城市更新典范案例皇家海港城鸟瞰图皇家海港城更新项目从环境可持续、经济可持续和社会可持续这三个方面对可持续发展做出了诠释,并从城市功能、交通脉络、资源利用和蓝绿体系等方面提出可持续发展策略。

同时,通过有效的实施管理,现阶段的实施成果和最初制定的环境目标的匹配度较高。

对于如何将原有工业港口区更新改造为一个可持续发展的新城区,皇家海港城项目从理念、策略和实施管理等方面具有宝贵的借鉴价值。

1. 城市可持续更新理念Conception of Sustainable Urban Regenration皇家海港城位于斯德哥尔摩市区的东北区,横跨北部Hjorthagen地区和南部的Loudden地区,距离城市中心区仅3.5公里,是整个城市发展的黄金地段。

这个地区原来是斯德哥尔摩市最大的工业港口区,建有工业配套设施和居民区。

斯德哥尔摩的城市更新项目分布图作为斯德哥尔摩2030计划中的重要组成部分,皇家海港城将规划新的住宅区和商业区,工业港口将被建造成现代化的港口码头,天然气工业区也将被建设成为拥有博物馆、学校和图书馆的城市公共区域。

整个项目占地236公顷,预计于2030年完成,届时将建成住宅12000套,新建60万平方米商业面积,创造35000个新的工作机会。

目前完工的区域是Hjorthagen地区北部新的住宅区,第一批居民已于2012年入住。

皇家海港城新规划的住宅区和商业区可持续发展理念在瑞典有着深厚的基础,在能源和环境技术的有效利用方面都处于世界领先的地位。

以哈默比湖城为代表的可持续城区的实践成果可圈可点,在此经验基础上,皇家海港城雄心勃勃,提出“打造一个世界级的可持续发展城区(a world-class environmental urban district)”的发展目标。

这体现了国家层面的战略意义,意图彰显瑞典在城市和环境领域的先进地位,为瑞典环境技术保障广阔的市场,并促进城市和建筑建设中创新科技的发展。

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Journal of Sustainable Development March, 2010Understanding How Much, Where and Why?Gloria Maria ElizondoDepartment of Design & TechnologySustainable Product Design Research GroupLoughborough University, UKE-mail: G.M.Elizondo@Victoria LofthouseDepartment of Design & TechnologySustainable Product Design Research GroupLoughborough University, UKE-mail: V.A.Lofthouse@The research is financed by CONACYT, Consejo Nacional de ciencia y la tecnología (Mexico)AbstractThis paper presents the findings which have arisen from a literature review carried out at the beginning of a three year CONACYT sponsored PhD project, investigating water-related activities in the home and the growing need to understand user behaviour when consuming water. It illustrates how habits and routines emerge and develop. It then considers how perceptions of consumption and hygiene influence domestic water use, reflecting on how social, psychological and technological aspects influence domestic water use. The paper concludes by identifying a number of research questions which will be investigated through the remainder of the project.Keywords: Water consumption, Household, User behaviour1. IntroductionClean, unpolluted water is essential to all kinds of life, and even though it is considered a renewable resource, pollution and over-usage are threatening the world supplies of this precious liquid. In many regions of the world groundwater has been extracted at a rate that exceeds natural precipitation back into the water cycle; this combined with pollution jeopardizes the availability and easy reuse of it (see Figure 1).Water extracted from the ground has three main uses: agriculture, industry and urban consumption. While domestic water use accounts for only a low percentage of the overall use of water, it is an issue that every person can relate to –and act upon. It is therefore essential to carry out research to understand the behaviour related to water usage. Given the decreasing amount of fresh water available, making the most out of the water resources available to us should be taken as a personal goal for everyone. Consuming water sustainably should be amongst everyone’s priorities: consuming responsibly, even if it means shifting one’s consumption habits, and consuming less.2. Factors behind water consumption in the homeFindings indicate that in some countries, such as the UK and USA people have, in general, a sound awareness of the environmental issues going on in the world (Barr, 2004). When enquired in surveys, they tend to respond in favour of environmental actions. Even when people express commitment or excitement about conservation plans, the actual change of behaviour/response is not evident (De Oliver, 1999; Jensen, 2008). Expressing support to conservation policies is often regarded as socially correct, it adds on to the social capital (Medd & Shove, 2005b) and it adheres to the social norms (Corral-Verdugo & Frías-Armenta, 2006). For one reason or another, this ‘aesthetic’ rightness struggles to go beyond the attitude into a real sustainable behaviour.3V ol. 3, No. 1 Journal of Sustainable DevelopmentFigure 2 gives a simplified estimated view of the distribution of water consumed at homePeople’s choices concerning water usage are attached to many drivers apart from environmental concerns: comfort, convenience, cleanness, economy and design. According to a study carried out in Denmark, among the drivers for one’s actions environmental qualities generally rank lower that the above marked ones (Jensen, 2008; Wiese, 2001). Ethnicity and religion are also two influential factors towards actions and consumption patterns, this though, has been less researched (Smith & Ali, 2006). Behavioural intentions, also referred to as attitudes, are just one of the aspects of actual behaviour. Situational and psychological circumstances also play a role and they all interrelate and act to finally produce one’s actions (see Figure 3).People, even when they feel they are responsible for their own actions (either pro or anti environmental), may assume that their actions have little or no weight on the whole global environment picture (Barr, 2004; Eden, 2000) resulting in a dismissal of the intention of behaving sustainably. This relates to Askew and McGuirk’s (Askew & McGuirk, 2004) conclusions that people think about conservation in an impersonal way, disconnected to their own water practices. The sometimes inconspicuous consequences of environmentally damaging behaviours are beaten by the immediate results in comfort and convenience of many antisocial and unsustainable behaviours (Lehman & Geller, 2004). Lilley, Lofthouse et al. (Lilley, Lofthouse, & Bhamra, 2005) refer to the fact that people think in large scale, rather than local scale, causing them not to relate to the larger consequences of their actions, and thus behave unsustainably.A large amount of the water consumed in the home happens in the bathroom, with showering and bathing accounting for 20-30% (Hand, Southerton, & Shove, 2003). Kitchen activities, mainly dishwashing, appear to have high water consumption. The use of dishwashers is becoming more and more common in western societies. Technologies are evolving, different sizes are being created to accommodate smaller households and prices are dropping, making such an appliance affordable to many. Some studies indicate that current electrical dishwashers are more efficient than manual dishwashing in terms of time, cleanness and water consumption (Stamminger, Elschenbroich, Rummler, & Broil, 2007); yet, surveys have shown that in the UK only 28% of the population owns a dishwasher (DEFRA, 2007).Water consumption is usually not obvious to the eye or mind. People tend to use water unconsciously, not referring to the use of water as an activity by itself, but as a tool to accomplish other activities (Gram-Hanssen, 2008; Medd & Shove, 2005a), whether related to hygiene (brushing teeth or washing clothes) or home care (gardening or mopping the floor), for pampering and relaxation (a nice bath after a long day of work) or even as a daily practice (the morning shower to ‘feel fresh and awake’). Most of the time in today’s rushing life, people are not fully aware of the amounts of water consumed (Randolph & Patrick, 2008), nor in which activities they consume the most. Since water-related actions present no particular personal-significance, with the acceleration in modern life, referred by some as ‘Time squeeze’ (Hand et al., 2003), people often opt for the most convenient solution in terms of time and ease, rather than the best solution regarding performance or environmental consequences.Population growth and change in lifestyle are two of the many factors that contribute in the rise of water use in households. People living in individual households (DEFRA, 2006), a growing trend today, increases the water consumption per capita by up to 40%. One two-person household consumes 300 litres of water per day, whereas a single occupancy household consumes 210 litres (DEFRA, 2006; DEFRA, 2007; Memon, Ton-That, & Butler, 2007). A study by Memon, Ton-That et al. (Memon et al., 2007) based on UK population, showed that indeed single occupancy has ‘the highest consumption from taps and those with high occupancies have the lowest’.3. Everyday practicesThe majority of domestic water related activities such as laundering, washing dishes or working in the garden are often performed in time-space coordination with other activities: watching the children, rushing off for a social engagement, or trying to finish before the 3pm football match. Most of the water related actions at home are continuously performed as part of habits or routines that are more complex than one simple action. They are divided into little practices (Schatzky, 1996) that people do in ‘auto-pilot’ most of the time. Human behaviour is often composed of several routines and habits which are individually developed throughout time in order to feel in control.Routines develop over time from childhood, with the influence of parents and the environment (Gram-Hanssen, 2008), evolving along with the circumstances that come along (Medd & Shove, 2005b). People stick to those routines to create a feel-safe environment (Guiddens, 1990). Krantz (Krantz, 2006) refers to this ‘safe environment’ as matter in place, which when disturbed changes into matter out of place (i.e. dirty dishes in sink). This triggers an action to re-establish the original state (wash and put them away). Many routines we learn and carry out without consciously thinking about them: we have a preconceived convenient technical arrangement of resources to revert the ‘out of place’ in short notice. People’s perception of a matter out of place, along with the personal arrangement of available resources are individual and unique; while one might not mind the pile of dishes in the sink until it interferes with other activities; others might like to have the sink empty and clean at all times. That is one of the reasons for which activities are carried out at different times, with different actions in the processes.4Journal of Sustainable Development March, 2010 Behavioural psychologists consider that the process of changing habits and routines into more sustainable (or unsustainable) ones happens in different stages (Pelletier, Lavergne, & Sharp, 2008): being aware of the problem, identifying the different possible solutions; choosing one and initiating a behaviour, and making the behaviour a long term habit, or in the worst case scenario, reverting to the original behaviour. Different approaches must be taken for each stage in order to succeed, as people will process the information in a more paused way and in the right time to make the best out of it. It is important to assess attitudes and behaviours and their evolution throughout time, since people tend to react favourably to sustainable or green campaigns in the beginning, but the interest seems to decline over time, as ‘behaviour returns to baseline if the source of motivation is withdrawn’ (Lehman & Geller, 2004).4. Evolution of water routinesShifting routines to make true long term changes is a long lasting process. New-more-sustainable habits might be well embraced in the beginning, but with time they tend to decline allowing the old routine to retake its place (Pelletier et al., 2008). It is an attitude-behaviour evolution through which user perception, lifestyle, technologies and infrastructure and social acceptance transform, and once people become comfortable and act almost automatically, it is harder to go back to previous behaviours.An example of this ‘evolution’ given by some authors (Hand et al., 2003) is bathing and showering. During the Roman times bathing was seen as something luxurious and social; then in the middle ages it was felt to be as something dangerous; and later, as part of cleaning and personal hygiene habits, it became a status symbol, differentiating upper and lower classes (Ger & Yenicioglu, 2004). Nowadays daily showering has become part of most people’s routine, probably due to changes in cleanness perception or to the ‘time-squeeze’ phenomenon. Thirty years ago a weekly bath was regarded as normal, sometimes even a bath a month. With time, hygiene perceptions changed, technology emerged and infrastructure became available to a majority of the population; these factors, along with the change in lifestyle towards a more rushed one, lead to the evermore common practice of daily showering (Hand et al., 2003).Another transformation of common habits related to changes in time and hygiene standards happened in laundering activities. Clothes used to be regarded as protection of the body from dirt; whereas now, it is the body that seems to soil the clothes, as they are washed even if used only once and for a brief period of time and show no dirt, they are washed simply to get rid of the ‘impurity’ of the body (Shove, 2003). A curious fact related to convenience and ‘time squeeze’ appears when even if clothes are not really dirty, many people conveniently wash all clothes worn, from all members of the family, rather than separate dirty from clean (Randolph & Troy, 2008); and this of course increases the number of washes and resources wasted. This implies that the what (is washed), when and how, are not enough to understand the washing practice. The reasons behind it might have a strong influence in one’s performance, therefore the importance of studying the activities in a wider context rather than in isolation.Changing peoples’ mindsets is not enough alone, adapting infrastructure and introducing technologies is also required. In an effort to reduce electricity consumption at home with little changes in behaviours, food and clothing superstores Asda and Marks and Spencer (UK) both launched campaigns for lowering garment washing temperatures from 40°C to 30°C in early 2007. “Think climate” was Marks and Spencer’s attempt (Mark and Spencer's, 2007), displaying in most clothing labels a maximum washing temperature of 30°C (see Figure 4).In late 2008, a new campaign in the UK ‘cold is the new hot’ (Ariel, 2008) was launched the Ariel laundry detergent brand (Proctor and Gamble), promoting the use of 15°C with a new washing media in the form of gel. This would make reasonable savings in energy, being better for the environment and for the pocket of consumers. Nevertheless most washing machines in current homes do not have the option of such a low temperature, and many of them, go only as low as 40°C. So even if people truly want to engage to the 15°C washing, there is a technological barrier that prevents them from doing so.5. Encouraging water savingFrom all of the activities at home that require water use, some of them can be considered as necessary and some as not-essential. Trying to change people’s behaviour into a more sustainable one, either through replacing a technology to a more efficient one, through a conscious change of routines from the part of the user, or by changing behaviour through product design, has to take into account the situation-context of the activity in play. In terms of water, demand can be elastic or inelastic for different purposes (Martinez-Espineira & Nauges, 2004). There is a baseline of consumption or ‘subsistence level’ that satisfies essential uses such as personal hygiene, cooking and drinking. These appear to be inelastic to variation in pricing or campaigns. Such essential uses should be targeted with the aim of conservation, whereas water used in recreational or non-vital activities, where use is elastic and therefore sensitive to context, should be tackled towards reduction or even avoidance of use.Geller et al., (1983) carried out a study on three different approaches for diminishing domestic water consumption: educational (pamphlets and handbooks), behavioural (written feedback of daily/weekly consumption and recommendations) and engineering (installation of water saving devices). The investigation indicated that with the5V ol. 3, No. 1 Journal of Sustainable Development installation of water conservation devices (aerators, cistern displacement units, shut off shower control) the expected savings of water and energy were not achieved. The findings suggest this was because it was done along with the distribution of information regarding the savings, and people could justify using the toilet more times, or taking more time in the shower. This phenomenon is referred to as ‘rebound effect’ (Herring & Roy, 2006) in which energy efficient appliances and new technologies do not always achieve a lower energy consumption. Psychologically, people justify the over-use of the resource (energy, water, etc.) and end up consuming the same or even higher amounts. As an example, fitting light saving bulbs outside the house could justify leaving them on all night to improve ‘security’ (Herring & Roy, 2006). The study on water consumption by Geller et al. (1983) confirms the rebound effect as only the users unaware of the water devices being installed in their homes achieved the savings predicted from the laboratory testing on the water devices.6. Reducing water consumption at homeIntroducing new and more efficient products is one of the choices to reduce water consumption in the household. Some of them replace other appliances keeping the old routines while using less energy and water, while others are meant to push the user to behave more sustainable by giving no option but to change behaviour. Finally, others simply give feedback on the resource consumption and leave the user the choice of changing or maintaining behaviour (see Figure 5).Some products available in the current market include systems that connect the hand basin or shower/bathtub with the toilet cistern, which accounts for a major part in water consumption in the bathroom; and shower systems that have the option of cycling the water to have a longer shower without huge wastes (see Figure 6).Simpler solutions include feedback gadgets (see Figure 5) and shower timers that help keeping track of the water used. Communicating intrinsic motives for environmental behaviours is one of the possible solutions or paths to take when trying to stimulate interest on sustainable/responsible actions/behaviour (O'Brien, 2008; Pelletier et al., 2008).New products and technologies are only effective if the consumer embraces them and uses them in the way they were designed to be used. That is a great challenge for designers.7. Conclusions and further researchConcerning reducing water consumption at home, it appears that it must be tackled by changing user behaviour. In order to do so, approaches must focus on the factors behind the various water-related activities that take place in the household. Policies, methods and campaigns must be designed in view of the local cultural and social background, alongside financial and technological accessibility (current or possible in the near future). In addition, the approaches must be multi-staged, in the sense that they must change behaviour in a gradual manner and must interconnect various means, from informing the user and providing feedback to making the use of new products be embraced by users and updating legislation accordingly – not necessarily in that order.The next stage of this project is designing a tactic to assess water consumption in households consisting of carrying out observational research into different lifestyle backgrounds in Anglo and Hispanic communities (Mexico and the UK). It will develop knowledge and experience with regards to how different methodologies may or may not apply in distinct cultures, and in how they are best applied. It will also enable the development of a more detailed understanding of user behaviour in terms or ‘water use’ in two distinct cultural contexts. Even though routines and habits are unique for each individual, similar situations can be recognized and can be regarded as widespread amongst people. The study will aim to identify similar patterns and analyse the differences in terms of cultural background; perceived value of water; perception of hygiene and comfort; technologies available; and infrastructure. A cross-cultural comparative analysis will be carried out in order to produce a series of conclusions on factors that influence peoples’ attitudes and trigger sustainable behaviours on water usage at home.Everything in life, both actions and things, take time and occupy space. Projects in life are formed by several little activities that interrelate in the ‘time-geography’ (Krantz, 2006) and at certain time coexist in a particular context. Water and humans interact when one takes a shower, then their link diverts again as the water and the person move on from that activity. Constraints and resources available at the time of the activity are unique for each occasion, and it is those along with the individual’s aims that indicate what practices are within reach and how they will be carried out (Krantz, 2006). Therefore activities and routines must be studied within a bigger context and not as isolated activities. In order to achieve a more sustainable level of water consumption there has to be a merge of the technologies available, product design and consumer demands, which all have a strong influence in behavioural evolution from traditional patterns towards sustainable practices (Nash, 2009).ReferencesAriel. (2008). Cold is the new hot. Retrieved 2008, from /Askew, L. E., & McGuirk, P. M. (2004). Watering the suburbs: distinction, conformity and the suburban garden. 6Journal of Sustainable Development March, 2010Australian Geographer, 35(1).Barr, S. (2004). Are we all environmentalists now? Rhetoric and reality in environmental action. Geoforum, 35(2), 231-249.Butler, D. (2005). Water infrastructure and the consumer. Retrieved November 2008, from /cswm/dwcworkshop3.phpButler, D. (2006). Water infrastructure and the consumer. Retrieved October 2008, from /cswm/dwcworkshop3.phpCorral-Verdugo, V., & Frías-Armenta, M. (2006). Personal normative beliefs, antisocial behavior and residential water conservation. Environment and Behavior, 38(3), 406-421.De Oliver, M. (1999). Attitudes and inaction: a case study of the manifest demographics of urban water conservation. Environment and Behavior, 31(3), 372-394.DEFRA. (2007, 31/01/2008). A comparison of manual washing-up with a domestic dishwasher. Retrieved July 2008, from DEFRA, D. f. t. E. F. a. R. A. (2006). Water efficiency in new buildings. Retrieved. from /documents/planningandbuilding/pdf/152813.pdf.Dworak, T., Berglund, M., Laaser, C., Strosser, P., Roussard, J., Grandmougin, B., et al. (2007). EU Water savings potential. Retrieved January 2009, from http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/quantity/pdf/water_saving_1.pdfEden, S. (2000). Environmental issues: sustainable progress? Progress in Human Geography, 24(1), 111-118.Geller, E. S., Erickson, J. B., & Buttram, B. A. (1983). Attempts to promote residential water conservation with educational, behavioral and engineering strategies. Population and Environment, 6(2), 96-112.Ger, G., & Yenicioglu, B. (2004). Clean and dirty: playing with boundaries of consumer´s safe havens. Advances in Consumer Research, 31.Gram-Hanssen, K. (2008). Consuming technologies - developing routines. Journal of Cleaner Production, 16, 1181-1189.Guiddens, A. (1990). The consequences of modernity. Cambridge: Polity Press.Hand, M., Southerton, D., & Shove, E. (2003). Explaining Daily Showering: A discussion of policy and practice. Retrieved November 2008, from /cswm/dwcworkshop2.phpHerring, H., & Roy, R. (2006). Technological innovation, energy efficient design and the rebound effect. Technovation. Jensen, J. (2008). Measuring consumption in households: interpretations and strategies. Ecological Economics, 68, 353-361.Krantz, H. (2006). Household routines - A time-space issue: A theoretical approach applied on the case of water and sanitation. Applied Geography, 26, 227-241.Lehman, P. K., & Geller, E. S. (2004). Behavior analysis and environmental protection: accomplishments and potential for more. Behavior and Social Issues, 13, 13-22.Lilley, D., Lofthouse, V., & Bhamra, T. (2005). Towards instinctive sustainable product use. Paper presented at the 2nd International Conference: Sustainability Creating the Culture, Aberdeen.Mark and Spencer's. (2007). Think Climate - Wash at 30°C. Retrieved November 2008, from /index.php?action=PublicPillarStoryDetailDisplay&pillar_id=1&story_id=35 Martinez-Espineira, R., & Nauges, C. (2004). Is all domestic water consumption sensitive to price control? Applied Economics, 36, 1697-1703.Medd, W., & Shove, E. (2005a). Traces of water workshop report 1: Perspectives on the water consumer. from /cswm/dwcworkshops.htmMedd, W., & Shove, E. (2005b). Traces of water workshop report 2: Water practices and everyday life: Lancaster Universityo. Document Number)Memon, F. A., Ton-That, L., & Butler, D. (2007). An investigation of domestic water consumption through taps and its impact on urban water flows. Water Science & Technology: Water Supply, 7(5-6), 69-76.Nash, H. (2009). The European Commission's sustainable consumption and production and sustainable industrial policy action plan. Journal of Cleaner Production, 17, 496-498.O'Brien, C. (2008). Sustainable Happiness: How Happiness Studies Can Contribute to a More Sustainable Future7V ol. 3, No. 1 Journal of Sustainable Development8 Canadian Psychology, 49(4), 289-295.Pelletier, L., Lavergne, K., & Sharp, E. (2008). Environmental Psychology and Sustainability: Comments on Topics Important for Our Future. Canadian Psychology, 49(4), 304-308.Randolph, B., & Patrick, T. (2008). Attitudes to conservation and water consumption. Environmental Science & Policy,2, 441-455.Randolph, B., & Troy, P. (2008). Attitudes to conservation and water consumption. Environmental Science & Policy, 2,441-455.Schatzky, T. (1996). Social practices. A Wittgensteinian approach to human activity and the social. CambridgeUniversity Press .Shove, E. (2003). Converging conventions of comfort, cleanliness and convenience. Journal of Consumer Policy, 26,395-418.Smith, A., & Ali, M. (2006). Understanding the impact of cultural and religious water use. Water and EnvironmentJournal, 20, 203-209.Stamminger, R., Elschenbroich, A., Rummler, B., & Broil, G. (2007). Washing-up behaviour and techniques in Europe.Wissenschaftlicher Beitrag Retrieved March 2009, from ndtechnik.uni-bonn.de/ifl_research/ht_1/HuWI2007WashingUpBehaviour.pdfWiese, B. S. (2001). The ecological non-seller? On the market acceptance of environmentally sound products. Paper forthe International Summer Academy on Technological Studies .FiguresFigure 1. Water availability according to management. Adapted from (Butler, 2006)Figure 2. Domestic water use distribution by house-area. Adapted from (Butler, 2005)Journal of Sustainable Development March, 20109 Figure 3. Factors influencing the creation of patterns and routinesFigure 4. Marks and Spencer's labelling– Think Climate- Wash at 30°CFigure 5. Products in the market: Sinkpositive , Autotap s’retrofit infrared sensor and faucet buddyV ol. 3, No. 1 Journal of Sustainable Development10Figure 6. Aqus connects sink with toilet. Wow shower cycles the water.。

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