Using natural gas for fuel releases less carbon dioxide per unit of energy produced than burning oil or coal, but its production and transport are accompanied by emissions of methane, which is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide in the short term. This calls into question whether climate forcing could be reduced by switching from coal and oil to natural gas. We have made measurements in Russia along the world's largest gas-transport system and find that methane leakage is in the region of 1.4%, which is considerably less than expected and comparable to that from systems in the United States. Our calculations indicate that using natural gas in preference to other fossil fuels could be useful in the short term for mitigating climate change.
Abstract:The Russian natural gas industry is the world's largest producer and transporter of natural gas. This paper aims to characterize the methane emissions from Russian natural gas transmission operations, to explain projects to reduce these emissions, and to characterize the role of emissions reduction within the context of current GHG policy. It draws on the most recent independent measurements at all parts of the Russian long distance transport system made by the Wuppertal Institute in 2003 and combines these results with the findings from the US Natural Gas STAR Program on GHG mitigation options and economics.With this background the paper concludes that the methane emissions from the Russian natural gas long distance network are approximately 0.6 % of the natural gas delivered. Mitigating these emissions can create new revenue 4 streams for the operator in the form of reduced costs, increased gas throughput and sales, and earned carbon credits. Specific emissions sources that have cost-effective mitigation solutions are also opportunities for outside investment for the Joint Implementation Kyoto Protocol flexibility mechanism or other carbon markets.
Porous 3D structures from mineralized collagen were fabricated applying a procedure in which collagen fibril reassembly and precipitation of nanocrystalline hydroxyapatite (HA) occur simultaneously. The resulting matrices were evaluated in vitro with respect to their suitability as scaffolds for bone tissue engineering. We found a high capacity of the material to bind serum proteins as well as to absorb Ca2+ ions, which could be advantageous to promote cell attachment, growth, and differentiation. Human bone marrow stromal cells (hBMSCs) were seeded onto the 3D scaffolds and cultivated for 4 weeks in the presence and absence of osteogenic supplements. We studied viability, proliferation, and osteogenic differentiation in terms of total lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity, DNA content, and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity. Furthermore, the expression for bone-related genes (ALP, bone sialo protein II (BSP II), and osteocalcin) was analyzed. In our investigation we found a 2.5-fold to 5-fold raise in DNA content and an increase of ALP activity for osteogenic induced hBMSC on collagen HA scaffolds. The expression of ALP and BSP II in these cells was also stimulated in the course of cultivation; however, we did not detect an upregulation of osteocalcin gene expression. These data suggest, that porous collagen HA scaffolds are suitable for the expansion and osteogenic differentiation of hBMSC and are therefore promising candidates for application as bone grafts.
Sign language and Web 2.0 applications are currently incompatible, because of the lack of anonymisation and easy editing of online sign language contributions. This paper describes Dicta-Sign, a project aimed at developing the technologies required for making sign language-based Web contributions possible, by providing an integrated framework for sign language recognition, animation, and language modelling. It targets four different European sign languages: Greek, British, German, and French. Expected outcomes are three showcase applications for a search-by-example sign language dictionary, a sign language-to-sign language translator, and a sign language-based Wiki.
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