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Costs labor

Another important consideration is the amount of labor necessary on the part of the user. One major difference between different software packages is the developer s choices between ease of use and efficiency of operation. For example, the Spartan program is extremely easy to use, but the price for this is that the algorithms are not always the most efficient available. Many chemistry users begin with software that is very simple, but when more sophisticated problems need to be solved, it is often easier to learn to use more complicated software than to purchase a supercomputer to solve a problem that could be done by a workstation with different software. [Pg.132]


Labor costs tend to be higher (although this can be overcome to some extent by use of computer control). [Pg.53]

Automatic control tends to be more straightforward (leading to lower labor costs and greater consistency of operation). [Pg.53]

Labor costs are extremely difficult to estimate. They depend on whether the process is batch or continuous, the level of automation, the number of processing steps, and the level of production. When... [Pg.414]

If, however, alternatives are to be compared which are very different in nature, such as a comparison between batch and continuous operation, some allowance for the difference in labor costs must be made. [Pg.415]

Capital and operating costs for soda ash production are extremely site specific (29,10). Key factors iaclude iafrastmcture development, freight to consumers, local energy and labor costs, and by-product saleabiUty. 1990 Hst price of bulk natural soda ash was 108/t, F.O.B. Wyoming. [Pg.526]

The most important considerations in marketing and estabUshing a crop from a new source are constancy of supply and quahty. Eor some spices, it is difficult to reduce labor costs, as some crops demand individual manual treatment even if grown on dedicated plantations. Only the individual stigmas of the saffron flower must be picked cinnamon bark must be cut, peeled, and roUed in strips mature unopened clove buds must be picked by hand and orchid blossoms must be hand pollinated to produce the vanilla bean. [Pg.24]

Price. The 1993 U.S. price for fluorine in cylinders was 109/kg for 2.2 kg and 260/kg for 0.7 kg cylinders. The price in large volumes is determined by (/) the price of hydrofluoric acid (2) power costs, ca 4.5 kWh electricity is required for each kilogram of fluorine produced (J) labor costs (4) costs to maintain and rebuild cells and (5) amortization of fixed capital. Fluorine production is highly capital intense. In addition, purification, compression, packaging, and distribution in cylinders increase the cost significantly. [Pg.130]

This includes labor costs, variable costs, overhead, taxes, and depreciation. [Pg.448]

Low capacity shaft kilns, direct-fired manually with bituminous coal, which were extant during 1900—1940, largely disappeared following World War 11 because of their high thermal and labor costs, poor lime quaUty, and offensive emission of black smoke. Another kiln that was phased out in the United... [Pg.172]

However, labor costs, when considering all of the fringe benefits including Hberal vacations and retirement poHcies, make doing business in Europe expensive. [Pg.88]

Pulp production and per capita consumption of paper and board for 1992 is shown in Table 8. The United States, Canada, Sweden, Finland, and Norway make up the North American and Scandinavian (NORSCAN) countries and produced about 63% (22.8 million tons) of the world output. Market share is growing for producers in Latin and South America, Western Europe, Asia, and Africa. These areas provide low cost pulp from state-of-the-art mills. Mills in the third world countries often enjoy the benefits of plentiful, fast-growing tree species, such as eucalyptus and tropical pines, and lower operating and labor costs (3). [Pg.283]

There are four key advantages to handling separated materials (/) separated materials systems are far less labor-intensive than other collection schemes (as mentioned eadier, labor costs are the largest component of most recovery facihties operating expenses) (2) the equipment needed to handle separated material is relatively simple and inexpensive (J) source separation is often the only method of resource recovery suitable for small communities ... [Pg.544]

Natural resins were probably known to early people, who recognized them as exudates from trees. Collection and use of these resins have been recorded by early Roman and Greek historians. Many products have been collected by the same methods throughout history to the present time. However, increased labor costs and competition from synthetic resins have reduced the demand for some natural resins, so they have become less available. In other cases, such as that of rosin, the traditional collection of gum from trees has been supplemented or replaced by isolation from other sources, such as paper pulping and tree stumps. [Pg.138]

If the standard deviation of the lot caimot be estimated, a sampling program of greater sample size is required to generate an estimate of the standard deviation for future sampling operations. In some cases, sample size can be increased and sampling costs reduced by the use of automatic samplers. These offer a substantial reduction in labor costs but an increase in capital costs. [Pg.298]

Economic Aspects. As of 1995, two manufacturers produced sodium thiosulfate in the United States with an estimated total capacity of 30,000 metric tons. Despite declining volume, prices have increased, reflecting increased taw material, energy, and labor costs. Production outside of the United States is at least 25%i of the U.S. production, mainly in Germany. [Pg.29]

Wood is the raw material of the naval stores iadustry (77). Naval stores, so named because of their importance to the wooden ships of past centuries, consist of rosin (diterpene resin acids), turpentine (monoterpene hydrocarbons), and associated chemicals derived from pine (see Terpenoids). These were obtained by wounding the tree to yield pine gum, but the high labor costs have substantially reduced this production in the United States. Another source of rosin and turpentine is through extraction of old pine stumps, but this is a nonrenewable resource and this iadustry is in decline. The most important source of naval stores is spent sulfate pulpiag Hquors from kraft pulpiag of pine. In 1995, U.S. production of rosin from all sources was estimated at under 300,000 metric tons and of turpentine at 70,000 metric tons. Distillation of tall oil provides, in addition to rosin, nearly 128,000 metric tons of tall oil fatty acids annually (78). [Pg.331]

Multiple-hearth roasting offers ease of operation, abiUty to handle a wide variety of ores or blends, and Httle downtime. On the other hand, these furnaces are no longer being built because of their high capital and labor costs, relatively low sulfur dioxide off-gas, need for added fuel, and marginal opportunity for waste-heat recovery. [Pg.399]


See other pages where Costs labor is mentioned: [Pg.414]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.434]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.413]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.331]    [Pg.346]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.132 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.251 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.132 ]




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