lesson 21 introduces the mitigation of the identified impacts and their management in EIA/ EA
Ever since the Chernobyl disaster and the Fukushima Daichi disaster , scientists have been studying the best ways to reclaim the lands that are inhabitable and are regarded wastelands that are too toxic for human habitation. In comes SUNFLOWER , The doctor as it is called in West Africa . After the Hiroshima , Fukushima, and Chernobyl nuclear disasters, fields of sunflowers were planted across the affected landscapes to help absorb toxic metals and radiation from the soil. New research now suggests that sunflowers ( Helianthus ) might be as good for the environment as they are pretty to look at. Sunflowers are what environmental scientists call hyperaccumulators – plants that have the ability to take up high concentrations of toxic materials in their tissues. Like all land-based plants, flowers have root systems that evolved as extremely efficient mechanisms for pulling nutrients, water, and minerals out of the ground, among them: zinc, copper, and o...
You want to know: Environmental impact assessment of the recycling and expansion project of the recycled rubber factory with a capacity of 30,000 tons per year.
ReplyDeleteYou want to know: Environmental impact assessment of the recycling and expansion project of the recycled rubber factory with a capacity of 30,000 tons per year.
ReplyDeleteYou want to know: Environmental impact assessment of the recycling and expansion project of the recycled rubber factory with a capacity of 30,000 tons per year.
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