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Telemetry in an Automated Water Supply Control SystemKilmer, John 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 28-31, 1996 / Town and Country Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / The White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) Water Supply Control System (WSCS) controls and monitors the water wells, tanks and booster pumps located at the southern end of the missile range. Figure 1 is an overview of the WSMR water supply system. The WSCS provides water for approximately 90 square miles of the 3,700 square mile missile range. The WSCS was designed and installed in 1990 and in need of upgrading and repair. The system was evaluated and found to be only moderately functional. The WSCS consists of an IBM compatible personal computer (PC) based user interface, located at the WSMR Water Plant and Fire Dept. and industrial-type computers called Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) based stations at the Water Plant, water wells and tanks. The stations communicate over a 400 MHz radio half-duplex link. The serial message utilizes the Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) and Block Check Character (BBC) type of error checking. The Master station controls pumping by downloading pump settings to the slave stations. The slave stations upload data to the master such as tank level, pump status, energy usage, gallons of water pumped and various alarms. The system was analyzed and the design was found to be sound. The system did require improvements. These improvements include adding surge suppressors, software upgrades, absolute reading flow rate sensors, and providing adequate environmental cooling for the control system. Procedures for periodic maintenance and calibration of the sensors and schedules for radio equipment maintenance were also developed. Software modifications to reduce WSMR energy usage by reducing pumping during peak energy demand times are being integrated into the WSCS. The peak energy demand times are determined by historical energy usage data.
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Causes of food insecurity in Southern Africa : an assessmentAbdalla, Yousif Ismael 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MScAgric (Agricultural Economics))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / Regional food security is considered one of the major challenges for the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) countries. SADC is one of the regions in the world currently
facing widespread transitory and chronic food insecurity (malnutrition), as well as persistent threats
of acute food insecurity (famine). The objective of this thesis, therefore, was to investigate and
assess the prevailing causes of food insecurity in Southern Africa.
The research revealed that transitory and chronic food insecurity (malnutrition) in the SADC region
exists due to the problems experienced with both the supply and demand sides of the food security
equation. However, though SADC has made limited attempts to tackle the problem of food
insecurity in the region, the Community did not appear to learn from the 1991/92 food insecurity
crisis when it recurred in 2001/02. This study consequently recommends that further investigations
take place into the primary data available in an attempt to address various issues relating to the
causes of food insecurity in Southern Africa in order to ensure long-term food security. Such issues
include the following: mobilising agriculture to increase food production rapidly enough to meet the
needs of the growing population of the region; bridging the prevailing gap between the public
actors, on the one side, and the private and informal actors, on the other, in order to deliver effective
food security services to the needy in the region; the designing of well-targeted food pricing
policies as an interim compromise between the social concerns relating to high and volatile food
prices and long-term economic growth and food security in the region; and the identification of the
role of women as food producers and agents of food security in the region.
On the supply side, the main food availability problems in the region lie on the agricultural level.
Low productivity and frequent disasters have been of a cyclic nature in SADC, leading to additional
difficulties with supplies. Such difficulties have been compounded by the inadequate political
support of the sector; a lack of investment therein; the instability of the world market; and an
increasingly unfair trade environment. Other major dimensions of the problem include: the
imposition of trade barriers, such as tariff, non-tariff and technical barriers, particularly the complex
and confusing tariff structure imposed by the Southern African Customs Union (SACU) countries
against other non-SACU SADC countries; the high cost of transport, especially in landlocked
countries, which has come about as a result of the weakening of the capacity and efficiency of the transport system in the region, due to a lack of investment in, as well as the poor performance of,
the transport sector. A lack of a diversified production structure in the SADC region was cited as
the main obstacle to the successful trade integration and economic development of the region.
Looking at the demand side, the main food access problems in the region consisted of a lack of food
entitlement (poverty) due to the weak economic growth resulting from unsuccessful macroeconomic
policies; a poor balance of payments situation; highly skewed patterns of income and
wealth distribution, resulting from maladministration due to short-sighted past colonial policies;
high levels of unemployment and land tenure insecurity; the failure of governance, both as regards a
lack of accountability and opposition to democratisation; and financial mismanagement. Rapid
population growth in the region resulted in an escalation in the demand for agricultural products, in
particular foodstuffs, and the reduced availability of arable land. The widespread preponderance of
Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) infection
was complicating the task of fighting hunger and undermining any attempts to strengthen the
livelihoods of the poor by depleting the adult agricultural labour potential in Southern Africa. A
lack of financial resources and institutional capacity (in the form of policy gaps) were the main
constraints to the implementation of successful poverty and food insecurity alleviation programmes
in the region, as comprehensive government intervention aimed at maintaining food security in the
region for most Southern Africans was unfeasible in the near future.
The research was conducted using the qualitative method of literature study, which proved a useful
descriptive and analytical framework for revealing significant causes of food insecurity prevailing
both in individual, households and at national levels in the SADC region. The study focused mainly
on the availability, and the ability to acquire, food, in an attempt to see how balance could be
achieved between the supply and demand sides of the food security equation by means of relevant
investigations. Documentary data were consulted in investigating the problem, in the light of the
fact that publications, such as books, academic journals and documents, illustrate the problem most
clearly.
In the planning of policy interventions, food insecurity in Southern Africa appears open to
improvement in the long term only if the actual income of households is increased, so that they can
afford to obtain enough food. Such improvement can take place in two ways: Firstly, by giving the
people who face transitory and chronic food insecurity the opportunity to earn enough to ensure that they can maintain an adequate food supply through domestic production, by improving agricultural
yield, and hence ensuring food security, at household level, and secondly, by means of the
facilitation of trade (in the form of food imports), by eliminating tariff, non-tariff and technical
barriers, and investing in the development of the transport infrastructure in the SADC region.
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Managing Supply Chain Risks in Fresh Food Items : A case study on Makro-Habib Pakistan Limited – A wholesales chain in PakistanMehmood, Waqas, Liaqat, Yasir, Iftikhar, Nauman, Raza, Syed Hassan January 2010 (has links)
<p><strong>Authors:</strong></p><p>Waqas Mehmood, Yasir Liaqat, Nauman Iftikhar, Raza Syed Hassan</p><p><strong>Tutor:</strong></p><p>Petra Andersson</p><p><strong>Examiner:</strong></p><p>Helena Forslund</p><p><strong>Title:</strong></p><p>Managing Supply Chain Risks in Fresh Food Items – a case study on Makro-Habib Pakistan Limited – a wholesales chain in Pakistan</p><p><strong>Background:</strong></p><p>In today’s era, businesses are facing various types of risks which can be legal/political, social, operational/technical, natural and economic in nature. For this purpose, companies need to have effective risk management process to mitigate these risks. Especially companies like Makro-Habib who heavily rely on effective and efficient supply chain can gain competitive advantage if they manage the risks within their supply chain network.</p><p><strong>Research Questions:</strong></p><p>RQ-1: What are the most significant supply chain risks in fresh food items at Makro-Habib?</p><p>RQ-2: How can significant supply chain risks in fresh food items of Makro-Habib be mitigated through proposed action plan?</p><p><strong>Purpose:</strong></p><p>The purpose of this thesis is to contribute to the knowledge on how to manage risks in the fresh food supply chain</p><p><strong>Method:</strong></p><p>The empirical data and the conclusions which are drawn from it are based on qualitative facts that are gathered through interviews and questionnaires. The results/conclusions drawn from responses of the interviews of fresh food section heads of Makro-Habib and the literature. This thesis is written from a positivistic perspective with a deductive approach.</p><p><strong>Conclusion:</strong></p><p>Various risk mitigation strategies at strategic, operational and visibility level are suggested like coordination, information sharing, training, monitoring to counter the most significant fresh food supply chain risks which are wrong ordering, contamination of products and FIFO (loose practice).</p>
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An econometric structure for cost functions with application to municipal waterDyke, Paul Thomas 21 June 1977 (has links)
In an effort to determine empirical cost functions for municipal
water supplies in the United States, the writer found it necessary to
specify an acceptable mathematical form to represent the cost equation.
A preliminary search yielded no theoretically consistent expression
adaptable to the problem.
The primary concern in the studstimay thus became one of identifying
theoretically sound statistical etion procedures for interrelated
long- and short-run cost functions. Criteria were established
to recognize a mathematical form qualified to function as a generalized
cost equation.
The prescribed path wound its way through a traditional overview
of economic production functions, cost theory literature, and curve
estimation procedures; then it moved into a comprehensive review of
empirical cost studies. This empirical section first identified
studies of short-run cost relationships and gave examples of declining,
constant, and increasing marginal costs. Theoretical literature,
addressing possible reasons for these diverse shapes, was then cited.
The same format was maintained for long-run studies reporting diverse
shapes. Theoretical explanations followed. The last part of the
literature review inspected the explicit model structure of those
studies combining long- and short-run cost curves.
When no econometric model was found in the literature which
satisfied the pre-specified criteria for a generalized cost equation,
the study assumed the task of developing such a framework. The
resulting econometric structure exhibited the following properties:
(1) The adopted equation generates both long- and short-run cost
curves. (2) Two cost groups are retained in both the long- and
short-run—costs which vary proportionately with output (i.e.,
operating costs), and costs which are independent of output (i.e.,
plant costs). (3) Plant capacity is strictly defined, and all
short-run production of a plant is constrained to a quantity not
to exceed that capacity. (4) Operating cost is a function of production
and plant utilization while plant cost is a function of
plant capacity.
Once the general econometric structure was developed it was
then adapted to an empirical study of the cost for supplying water
to municipalities. A survey of operating data for water utilities,
collected by the American Water Works Association for the year 1965,
was used as the principal data source for the application. Other
independent variables, considered potentially important in determining
cost, were evaluated and added to or omitted from the model.
These characteristics included alternative treatments, types of
customers, sources of water, city density, etc.. The resulting
regression equations indicated the following industry structure:
(1) Although the major portion of the industry is facing economies-to-
scale, the long-run cost curve turns distinctly upward for large
water suppliers. (2) Over 95 per cent of the plants face downward
sloping short-run average cost curves. (3) With the available data
no statistical evidence could be found to indicate a plant's operating
cost is affected by the level of plant utilization.
The municipal water example was used to demonstrate the versatility
of the generalized cost function in accommodating cost studies
and hypothesis testing.
The author therefore asserts that the econometric structure
developed in this study is qualified to fulfill the pre-selected
requirements of a theoretically sound statistical estimation procedure
for interrelating long- and short-run cost functions. / Graduation date: 1978
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A quantification of the effects of electricity supply interruptionsMorgan, A. J. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Improving the market performance of UK fresh produce suppliers by identifying the needs of the multiple food retail sector : an interaction approachWhite, H. M. F. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Credit Risk and Inter-Firm DependenceCardella, Laura D. January 2012 (has links)
I explore whether inter-firm linkages affect firms' credit risk. After controlling for the endogeneity between a firm's credit risk and its dependence on customers and suppliers, I find that supply-chain relationships affect firms' credit risk. My results indicate firms with exposure to major customers have lower ratings, and the level of firm dependence on major customers is negatively associated with firms' credit ratings. Further, I show when a firm's customers also depend on it, this mitigates the negative effect of dependence on credit risk. Finally, I document a negative association between a customer's reliance on its dependent suppliers and the customer's credit rating. Overall, my results provide insights regarding how inter-firm relationships between corporate customers and suppliers affect credit risk.
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Propagation of power line carrier signals through the distribution transformerHorridge, Paul January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of small scale enterprises in African seed industriesBockari-Kugbei, Samuel Morie January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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The rhetoric and reality of gender issues in the domestic water sector : a case study from IndiaJoshi, Deepa January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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