释义 |
adjective ɛkˈstraktɪvɪkˈstraktɪv Of or involving extraction, especially the extensive extraction of natural resources without provision for their renewal. Example sentencesExamples - Civil groups in Eastern Europe and Central Asia slammed the World Bank for projects it funds in extractive industries at talks which ended over the weekend, participant groups said in a statement on Sunday.
- Conservationists and animal welfare groups agree that the greatest threat to Asian elephants is loss of habitat, as burgeoning human populations and extractive industries push into wilderness.
- Add in the historical aspect of the reef, which brings into focus the reef as resource - a story of commodities and extractive industries, from fishing to mining.
- But in the last three years, the government's attention and resources have shifted to older sectors of the economy, with tariff protection and subsidies to extractive industries.
- By the end of the seventeenth century, Spain itself had begun to decline as a world power through financial mismanagement, outmoded trade policies, and continued reliance on exhausted extractive industries.
- Its second application was to have 494 acres at Belgard Quarry designated for extractive industry zoning, but the county manager believes the current agricultural zoning is appropriate.
- This is clearly the case in the extractive industries such as mining and petroleum.
- As a highly capital intensive industry, linked in the first place to the extractive industries such as mining, its finances were always precarious, even prior to nationalisation.
- They're under the influence of the extractive industries.
- The natural resources department's extractive resource draft plan is designed to protect south-east Queensland's remaining hard rock quarry sites from encroaching housing estates.
- Even the initial large-scale industrial production base in the mining sector was specifically tailored to serve the process of extractive exploitation of natural resources.
- The first category consisted of extractive industries, wherein naturally occurring substances present in the cave environment were gathered, mined, refined, or manufactured and then sold for profit.
- While extractive industries like mining depend on the physical resources of the country where they operate, many manufacturing and service firms do not.
- Tasmania's economy, like the rest of Australia's, was originally based on sheep ranching, agriculture, and extractive industries like mining and logging.
- By definition, Wilderness Areas are off-limits to industrial use, and so have a natural enemy in the extractive industries.
- The expansion of mining and other extractive industries, deforestation and road building can increase the habitat for malaria carrying mosquitoes leading to an increase in the incidence of the disease.
- Although state corruption has traditionally been blamed for the disappointing results of aid, the report argues that bribes often come from Western sources, notably in the mining and extractive industries.
- First, an increasing number of Russian companies in the extractive industries are acquiring significant assets in Western countries or are using international financial markets to raise capital.
- There was also a widespread leather processing industry, some metallurgical production, and some extractive industry, with lead, iron, tin, and, most importantly, coal being mined.
- But this volume does not include the extensive network of seismic lines, industrial access roads, and pipelines needed to support these extractive industries.
adjective Of or involving extraction, especially the extensive extraction of natural resources without provision for their renewal. Example sentencesExamples - The expansion of mining and other extractive industries, deforestation and road building can increase the habitat for malaria carrying mosquitoes leading to an increase in the incidence of the disease.
- First, an increasing number of Russian companies in the extractive industries are acquiring significant assets in Western countries or are using international financial markets to raise capital.
- Civil groups in Eastern Europe and Central Asia slammed the World Bank for projects it funds in extractive industries at talks which ended over the weekend, participant groups said in a statement on Sunday.
- Its second application was to have 494 acres at Belgard Quarry designated for extractive industry zoning, but the county manager believes the current agricultural zoning is appropriate.
- The natural resources department's extractive resource draft plan is designed to protect south-east Queensland's remaining hard rock quarry sites from encroaching housing estates.
- But this volume does not include the extensive network of seismic lines, industrial access roads, and pipelines needed to support these extractive industries.
- They're under the influence of the extractive industries.
- Add in the historical aspect of the reef, which brings into focus the reef as resource - a story of commodities and extractive industries, from fishing to mining.
- There was also a widespread leather processing industry, some metallurgical production, and some extractive industry, with lead, iron, tin, and, most importantly, coal being mined.
- Although state corruption has traditionally been blamed for the disappointing results of aid, the report argues that bribes often come from Western sources, notably in the mining and extractive industries.
- By the end of the seventeenth century, Spain itself had begun to decline as a world power through financial mismanagement, outmoded trade policies, and continued reliance on exhausted extractive industries.
- Tasmania's economy, like the rest of Australia's, was originally based on sheep ranching, agriculture, and extractive industries like mining and logging.
- Even the initial large-scale industrial production base in the mining sector was specifically tailored to serve the process of extractive exploitation of natural resources.
- Conservationists and animal welfare groups agree that the greatest threat to Asian elephants is loss of habitat, as burgeoning human populations and extractive industries push into wilderness.
- By definition, Wilderness Areas are off-limits to industrial use, and so have a natural enemy in the extractive industries.
- The first category consisted of extractive industries, wherein naturally occurring substances present in the cave environment were gathered, mined, refined, or manufactured and then sold for profit.
- But in the last three years, the government's attention and resources have shifted to older sectors of the economy, with tariff protection and subsidies to extractive industries.
- As a highly capital intensive industry, linked in the first place to the extractive industries such as mining, its finances were always precarious, even prior to nationalisation.
- While extractive industries like mining depend on the physical resources of the country where they operate, many manufacturing and service firms do not.
- This is clearly the case in the extractive industries such as mining and petroleum.
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