Metrology Parts Releases A Manufacturing Guide to Reducing Production Waste
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BAXTER, MInn. (PRWEB) February 23, 2021
Metrology Parts has announced the release of their newest article: A Manufacturing Guide to Reducing Production Waste. The article highlights how to reduce a business’s production waste in a cost-effective manner.
“Companies can save money by reusing waste or recovering materials from waste,” the company article says. “A business can use those recovered materials instead of paying for new inputs.” Reusing these materials not only saves money, but also helps a company to become more efficient in its processes.
The article discusses why it is important to reduce production waste as well as cost-effective approaches to begin reducing said waste. It also provides insight on how this keeps the environment safe, and can move companies towards closed-loop manufacturing. Proper measuring tools, for example, cut out excess waste which m
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Teens Press Climate Cases in Courts Across the World
EUGENE, Oregon, January 25, 2021 (ENS) – Climate change is worsening by the year, threatening to make the planet unliveable for people now in their teens and early twenties. Because government actions are often at the root of climate warming, young Americans have taken the first legal steps in a youth climate movement to require the government to respect their right to a stable, healthy climate, encouraging similar actions globally.
Today, there are many youth climate cases before courts across the world in which young people are pressing their governments to take actions that will mitigate the effects of climate change.
In the misty mountains of Pingwu County in China’s province of Sichuan, community forests could offer promising solutions to the dual problem of rural poverty and habitat loss.
A recent case study by Tian Yongzhen and Xu Chen two international natural resource management students at the University of British Columbia (UBC) argues that Pingwu’s community forests and a blended approach to ecological conservation and poverty alleviation are having an impact.
In the area, forest plots are allocated to local families and professional collectives for a period of 70 years under China’s 1983 “household responsibility system.” These communities are allowed to collectively manage the allocations to support their traditional livelihoods, which include fishing, farming and logging.