1 / 13

How much do you know?

How much do you know?. Sustainable Procurement Pub Quiz. Question 1: How much of the total energy used, over time, in the average video recorder in Britain, is used while it is on standby?. A: Up to 15% B: Up to 40% C: Up to 60% D: Up to 85%. How Much Do You Know?.

Télécharger la présentation

How much do you know?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How much do you know? Sustainable Procurement Pub Quiz

  2. Question 1: How much of the total energy used, over time, in the average video recorder in Britain, is used while it is on standby? A: Up to 15% B: Up to 40% C: Up to 60% D: Up to 85% How Much Do You Know? The answer is DIn Britain, every year, £163m of electricity is used by TVs and videos on stand-by.

  3. Question 2:The energy saved by recycling one aluminium drinks can is enough to run a TV for how long? A: 30 minutes B: One hour C: Three hours D: Ten hours How Much Do You Know? The answer is C  Recycling an aluminium can saves up to 95% of the energy needed to produce the amount of aluminium ore required to make a new one.

  4. Question 3:How much energy does a state-of-the-art energy efficient washing machine use compared to an old, inefficient one? A: Two thirds less B: Half as much C: One third less How Much Do You Know? The answer is A  Energy efficient dishwaters cut energy use by nearly half and energy efficient tumble dryers cut it by a third.

  5. Question 4: Which of the following are currently being used to generate electricity? A: Human excrement and pig excrement B: Chicken excrement and pig excrement C: Chicken excrement and human excrement D: Chicken, pig and human excrement How Much Do You Know? The answer is D  Electricity has been generated from human sewage sludge for decades, and Britain’s first animal dung-fired power station opened in 2002, using methane from pig, cow and chicken slurry to generate electricity.

  6. Question 5: Biodiesel is a natural, renewable fuel which can be used in diesel engines – which of the following can it NOT be made from? A: Soya beans B: Used chip fat C: Carrots D: Oilseed rape How Much Do You Know? The answer is C  Biodiesel can be made from most vegetable oils, including soya bean oil and the oil from oilseed rape (canola). Some companies manufacture it from used oil from restaurant fryers. It can be mixed with ordinary diesel.

  7. Question 6:The amount of energy poured onto the Earth by the Sun every 15 minutes equivalent to what? A: The world’s electricity needs for a decade B: The world’s electricity needs for a year C: The world’s electricity needs for a month D: The world’s electricity needs for a day How Much Do You Know? The answer is B

  8. Question 7:Hydrogen is a cleaner vehicle fuel than petrol and diesel, but electricity is needed to produce the hydrogen. If all Britain’s vehicles were converted to run on hydrogen power, how many more nuclear power stations would be needed to generate the electricity? A: 10 B: 50 C: 100 D: 500 How Much Do You Know? The answer is C

  9. Question 8: The heat energy stored in the uppermost 10km of the Earth’s crust is equivalent to how many times the total energy stored in all the world’s oil and gas? A: 50,000 B: 500 C: 5 D: 0.5 How Much Do You Know? The answer is A  The temperature a few metres below ground in the UK is around 12C. "Ground source heat pumps" are now available to pump this heat from below ground to warm individual homes.

  10. Remember... Climate change is happening quickly It has serious health consequences Urgent action has both immediate and long term benefits for health and the NHS Health professionals are trusted and have a duty to get educated, engaged and set an example by speaking out and acting on “the 21st century’s most serious health challenge”

  11. Environmental disease burden • Unsafe water and sanitation, poor hygiene. This environmental hazard is estimated to kill nearly 1.7 million people annually largely as a result of a range of waterborne diseases, including diarrhoeal diseases. • Indoor air pollution. Associated with solid fuel use, mostly in poor countries. Globally, 1.5 million people died from diseases caused by indoor air pollution in the year 2002. • Urban air pollution. Estimated to kill about 800k every year. Elevated levels of fine particulates in ambient air – typically emitted by vehicles, industry and energy generation – are associated with increases in daily and long-term premature mortality due to cardiopulmonary diseases, acute respiratory infections and cancers. • Climate change. Causes an estimated 150000 excess deaths annually, as well as injuries, from more extreme weather events such as heat waves, floods and droughts; impacts on regional food production; and changed transmission patterns of vector borne and other infectious diseases. • Lead exposure. Contributes to both childhood mental retardation and cardiovascular diseases associated with high blood pressure, together causing a loss of almost 13 million disability adjusted life years (DALYs - a combined measure of morbidity and premature mortality) annually, or nearly 1% of the global burden of disease.

  12. important environmental contribution Diseases with an • Diarrhoeal diseases. Some 94% of the 1.8 million annual deaths from diarrhoeal disease is attributable to environmental causes, particularly unsafe drinking water and inadequate sanitation. • Lower respiratory infections. Over 1.5 million deaths annually from lower respiratory infections (41% of the LRI disease burden) are attributable to environmental factors, largely associated with exposure to indoor smoke from solid fuels and outdoor (ambient) air pollution. • Vector-borne disease. Over 500000 deaths annually, or 42% of the global disease burden from malaria, are attributed to modifier able environmental factors such as poorly-designed irrigation and water systems; poor housing and settlement sitting; deforestation and ecosystem change/degradation. • Road traffic injuries. An estimated 467000deaths from road traffic injuries, or about 40% of the total annual disease burden from traffic injury, is attributable to environmental factors, e.g. transport and land-use designs that expose pedestrians and cyclists to excessive risks. • Unintentional poisonings. Globally it is estimated that 71% of all unintentional poisonings, which kill about 350000 people annually, are attributable to environmental factors. In developing countries, such poisonings are strongly associated with poor chemical management in agro-industries and occupational settings.

More Related