In this section, you can access to the latest technical information related to the FUTURE project topic.

Local content policies and petro-development in Sub-Saharan Africa: A comparative analysis

"http://webservices.elsevier.com/schemas/search/fast/types/v4" xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" id="as0005" view="all"> The scale of land-contamination problems, and of the responses to them, makes achieving sustainability in contaminated land remediation an important objective. The Sustainable Remediation Forum in the UK (SuRF-UK) was established in 2007 to support more sustainable remediation practice in the UK. The current international interest in ?sustainable remediation' has achieved a fairly rapid consensus on concepts, descriptions and definitions for sustainable remediation, which are now being incorporated into an ISO standard. However the sustainability assessment methods being used remain diverse with a range of (mainly) semi-quantitative and quantitative approaches and tools developed, or in development. Sustainability assessment is site specific and subjective. It depends on the inclusion of a wide range of considerations across different stakeholder perspectives. Taking a tiered approach to sustainability assessment offers important advantages, starting from a qualitative assessment and moving through to semi-quantitative and quantitative assessments on an ?as required' basis only. It is also clear that there are a number of ?easy wins' that could improve performance against sustainability criteria right across the site management process. SuRF-UK has provided a checklist of ?sustainable management practices' that describes some of these. This paper provides the rationale for, and an outline of, and recently published SuRF-UK guidance on preparing for and framing sustainability assessments; carrying out qualitative sustainability assessment; and simple good management practices to improve sustainability across contaminated land management activities.

» Author: : Jesse Gore, Imade E. Imasuen-Williams, Abass M. Conteh, Kelly E. Craven, Monica Cheng, Murray Korc

» Reference: Saharan Africa indicates a ?softer' approach to regulation over time and a the emergence of a more pro-business agenda. This paper seeks to conduct an in-depth survey of LCPs in oil and gas across Sub-Saharan Africa in order to identify differing approach

» Source: ScienceDirect - GPP

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