The Importance Of Climate And Geographic Conditions In Our City

Great Essays
Our city is located in the scenic region of Hawaii, where the beautiful weather and nice sunsets are located. The climate in our city includes a sunny region, which is from the volcanoes and oceanic surrounding, and mountainous region which is Mauna Kea. What makes the climate favorable is that our climate is always sunny with controlled weather, nice ocean view, also in favor of those mountain climbers who want a vacation at Mauna Kea. What makes the geography favorable in our city is that it is located on an Island where the beautiful weather is and Tropical season. Overall our city’s climate and geographical location are nice, hot, beautiful beaches, high amounts of sunshine, and a ton of tourism. Some innovations in our city is we have …show more content…
We create a machine with can transform dust, water to clean water. Another thing with we use is a machine with incinerates the trash, and, with the smoke we create energy, it is a renewable type of energy. The other problem is the amount of trash that humans produce every day, for this problem we recycle most of the trash. Our system will be organized by states, is divided into districts, and each district can have a separate office. Our city is making by recycling things and contain a hospital, a recycling center, police center, fire drill, water treatment central, a supermarket, many houses, a high amount of buildings and industries. One of the things with humans more use in the modern days is the energy. There is two types of energy, the renewable (with can replenish) and the nonrenewable (with can’t replenish). We use the renewable energy. For our trash we are incinerated it (or sometimes recycling), it is cheap, but it produces smoke, because that we are going to use the smoke to create energy. The machine with converting the smoke in energy already exist, but is not so common, and is expensive, but is a way ecologically correct of producing energy and for incinerating the …show more content…
Some of the risks associated with burning municipal waste to produce electricity are: it will bring smoke into the air, and one incinerator factory costs 250 million dollars (Piper). Incinerators have benefits, they produce electricity, and they solve the waste management problem. They also have downsides, one of them is the costs for the incinerators, which is high, and that could cut into funding for other programs. The incinerators do generate electricity, so the electricity produced might even out the extra cost. Also the extra smoke in the air poses a health risk to the citizens in the city. There are more risks than benefits to incinerating trash for electricity, but what if the smoke it creates can also be used for

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Office workers can purchase K-cup bins and fill them up with used k-cups. The Keurig’s disposal system turned the used coffee grounds into compost and sends the rest to be incinerated. This turns to energy at the power plant. However, critics point out that the waste-to-energy is hardly green because of the airborne pollutants released from incinerators.…

    • 1637 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the video pollution solution number 2570, Bill Nye helps us try to understand pollution of the earth in the form of toxic wastes, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and noise. He states that the earth is an ecosystem and demonstrates how human beings, industries, and other facilities pollute the earth which is a closed ecosystem. He further states that most of pollution comes from human beings but not big factories and power plants that everyone thinks. This takes place in the form of small vehicle engines, the noise that people make and lawn mower. All these are referred to as non-point source pollution.…

    • 733 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The world can be overwhelming yet simple, as time has passed and humans evolved to create new technology we find ourselves living in a world of by-products. In the article ”This is Paradise: Puente Hills Landfill, City of Industry, California” written by Jeanne Marie Laskas we are introduced to the concept that as humans have evolved so has our manufacturing, leaving, mountains of trash in our evolutionary wake. We meet few but important characters of the Puente Hill Landfill, simple men who share a consistent sense of pride within their occupation. We are taken on a journey through history, concepts of trash collection we find that some of our ancestors were brutally smart at protecting their cities and future civilizations. Creating rules…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    It states, “The incinerator managers can manually send 9,400 pounds of lead, 2560 pounds of mercury, and 157,400 pounds of fine particles out of the 150- foot incinerator.” The use of children and human health in general are used to describe the vulnerability that risk assessments do not often take into considerations. By mentioning that human health is in jeopardy, the audience tends to believe the author that we must use alternative assessments and becomes persuaded to set limitations on appropriate levels of various…

    • 1605 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    If we were to do this we could lessen the amount of waste. When separating the garbage from the good and bad, we could give the good food to the homeless and this improves their well…

    • 752 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The role of city planning should be targeted and revolved around the city’s residents and not based around the business aspect. The residents of the city are a huge factor on the cities stability and protraction. Without the specific individuals playing their part in the city, the whole system will fall apart. The well being and mood of the resident have a huge impact on the city’s productivity. The factors that need to go into the city planning would have to be limiting gentrification and taking consideration of the individuals in the city.…

    • 1501 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Wasted Society Lars Eighner was born in Texas, in 1948. He grew up in Houston and graduated from the University of Texas-Austin. Some of his articles were published in magazines like Threepenny Review, the Guide, and Inches. Lars Eighner became homeless in 1988 when he left his job as an attendant at a mental hospital. Eighner’s essay “On Dumpster Diving” (627) explains how our society is becoming a throwaway society, and how people throw away a lot of perfectly useful stuff.…

    • 624 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Coal Argument Essay

    • 1010 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Coal is one of the primary energy sources in the United States. The US Energy Information Agency reported in 2009 that coal counts for 23% of the total energy use in the US. However coals is a finite resource,harmful to the environment and also affects human lives. Scientists predict that supply of coal will deplete in a century and the use of coal is harmful to the environment in that the mining of coal degrades land, it pollutes air, causes heating of lakes and rivers, and causes health issues for workers working in coal plants. Americans must find a new resource to replace coal; American find a resouce that not only is renwable but one that is eco-friendly.…

    • 1010 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    By implementing these clean energy solutions, health could be improved as most of the health issues related to air and water pollution would disappear due to the fact that solar, wind and hydroelectric system don’t produce any contaminated agents. According to one Harvard study the life cycle costs and public health effects of burning coal could be estimated at $74.6 billion every year (Epstein et al,…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Argument of Fact Unsustainable fossil fuels have been in controversy in the more recent years. The world’s population is constantly growing and changing with that the need for more energy grows as well. Right now, the main way to fulfill the need of these growing populations come from the use of fossil fuel. One major problem. Fossil fuel is unsustainable, and the need is overcoming the what the earth can create and produce.…

    • 877 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    “This is by far the worst water quality we’ve ever seen in our sailing careers,” said Ivan Bulaja, a coach for an Austrian team training at Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, where the 2016 Olympics will be held. The waters are polluted with sewage, dead fish, and trash, posing a serious threat to athletes training or competing there. Kristina Mena, a professor of public health, is an expert in water quality, and conducted a risk test for athletes competing in the waters Rio, assuming they would consume three teaspoons, which is far less than athletes say they take in. " The levels of viruses are so high in these Brazilian waters that if we saw those levels here in the United States on beaches, officials would likely close those beaches," Mena said.…

    • 1052 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Geography is the study of the interaction between people within their environment at a place. It includes three factors: space, place, and environment. In this paper, I will first explain what those three factors entail. Then, I will relate the factors to Portland in detail.…

    • 1000 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Thesis: Our energy comes predominantly from fossil fuels because of it’s supposed inexpensiveness. However, the cost of fossil fuels in terms of human lives is often ignored. Nuclear power, on the other hand, is a much safer alternative because it results in fewer deaths per unit of energy produced than coal and natural gas. By comparing their outputs in terms of energy produced per unit of fuel consumed, and comparing that with the amount of byproducts produced as well as the amount of deaths associated with both energy sources we can analyse their relative harmfulness.…

    • 1010 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    If there was the possibility of changing the fate of the world for the better, would the people do it? At this very moment we are burning up fossil fuels that we will never be able to replenish. There is a clock running on how long we can make fossil fuels last, and that clock is ticking down every day every hour. We were made to evolve and learn, so let’s do so. Let’s focus on finding a new way to power the world that does not poison it.…

    • 1766 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Benefits Of Go Green

    • 1822 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Due to the growth of population, the demand of resources has massively increased, which creates pollution and causes unstoppable growth of global average temperature that are harming the environment. This situation known as the Global Warming, which is one of the biggest issues today. Nowadays, each individual is heavily dependent on electricity and vehicles that he/she has develop the habits of wasting because of the advantage of conveniences. Therefore, to avoid global warming, go green is the best way to stop the damaging, and it is simple and easy for each individual to exercise in their daily life. The proposal will provide the problem of the Global Warming, various methods and the benefits of going green – reduce, reuse, recycle.…

    • 1822 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays