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#agriculture tires market
blogaarti · 1 year
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Italy Agriculture Tires Market - Growth, Share, Trends, Demand and Analysis Report Forecast 2021-2027
The most recent report from Fairfield Market Research brings attention to the promising growth prospects of the agriculture tires market. With an estimated CAGR of 4.1%, this market is expected to exceed the notable revenue threshold of $12.5 billion by the conclusion of 2027. These findings highlight the market's importance as a significant player within the global agriculture tires industry. 
For More Industry Insights Read: https://www.fairfieldmarketresearch.com/report/agriculture-tires-market
The agriculture sector is witnessing robust development, with a major emphasis on mechanizing farming activities. The adoption of advanced technologies and innovative practices has created numerous growth opportunities in the region. The country's rich agricultural heritage, diverse agricultural landscape, and commitment to sustainable farming contribute to its potential as a significant market for agriculture tires. 
The report by Fairfield Market Research highlights the long-term growth opportunities in Italy. Following spiraling sales in the fiscal year of 2022, the country is poised to unlock new growth prospects for the global agriculture tires industry. Anticipating these trends, Italy is expected to witness an influx of investments, fostering robust developments and driving market expansion. 
The paced adoption of tires in the agriculture sector, compared to the mining and construction industries, demonstrates growth potential. The rising spending capacity of people, along with an increase in off-road activities, are factors contributing to the influential growth observed in the global agriculture tires market. 
Fairfield Market Research's comprehensive analysis underscores the immense growth potential of the agriculture tires market. With a projected CAGR of 4.1% and favorable market conditions, is set to contribute significantly to the global industry, driving new opportunities for expansion and development. 
For More Information Visit:  https://www.fairfieldmarketresearch.com/
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sandhyarani1999 · 2 years
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acti-veg · 28 days
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Leather vs. Pleather: 8 Myths Debunked
Since we are all beyond tired of seeing the same regurgitated leather posts every day, I've compiled and briefly debunked some of the most common myths peddled about leather and pleather… So hopefully we can all move on to talk about literally anything else.
1) Leather is not sustainable.
Approximately 85% of all leather (almost all leather you'll find in stores) is tanned using chromium. During the chrome tanning process, 40% of unused chromium salts are discharged in the final effluents, which makes it's way into waterways and poses a serious threat to wildlife and humans. There are also significant GHG emissions from the sheer amount of energy required to produce and tan leather.
Before we even get the cow's hide, you first need to get them to slaughter weight, which is a hugely resource-intensive process. Livestock accounts for 80% of all agricultural land use, and grazing land for cattle likely represents the majority of that figure. To produce 1 pound of beef (and the subsequent hide), 6-8 pounds of feed are required. An estimated 86% of the grain used to feed cattle is unfit for human consumption, but 14% alone represents enough food to feed millions of people. On top of that, one-third of the global water footprint of animal production is related to cattle alone. The leather industry uses greenwashing to promote leather as an eco-friendly material. Leather is often marketed as an eco-friendly product, for example, fashion brands often use the Leather Working Group (LWG) certificate to present their leather as sustainable. However, this certification (rather conveniently) does not include farm-level impacts, which constitute the majority of the negative environmental harm caused by leather.
2) Leather is not just a byproduct.
Some cows are raised speciifically for leather, but this a minority and usually represents the most expensive forms of leather. This does not mean that leather is just a waste product of beef and dairy, or that it is a completely incidental byproduct; it is more accurate to call leather a tertiary product of the beef and dairy industries. Hides used to fetch up to 50% of the total value of the carcass, this has dropped significantly since COVID-19 to only about 5-10%, but this is recovering, and still represents a significant profit margin. Globally, leather accounts for up to 26% of major slaughterhouses’ earnings. Leather is inextricably linked to the production of beef and dairy, and buying leather helps make the breeding, exploitation and slaughter of cows and steers a profitable enterprise.
3) Leather is not as biodegradable as you think.
Natural animal hides are biodegradable, and this is often the misleading way leather that sellers word it. "Cow hide is fully biodegradable" is absolutely true, it just purposely leaves out the fact that the tanning process means that the hide means that leather takes between 25 and 40 years to break down. Even the much-touted (despite it being a tiny portion of the market) vegetable-tanned leather is not readily biodegradable. Since leather is not recyclable either, most ends up incinerated, or at landfill. The end-of-life cycle and how it relates to sustainability is often massively overstated by leather sellers, when in fact, it is in the production process that most of the damage is done.
4) Leather is not humane.
The idea that leather represents some sort of morally neutral alternative to the evils of plastic is frankly laughable, at least to anyone who has done even a little bit of research into this exploitative and incredibly harmful industry. Cows, when properly cared for, can live more than fifteen years. However, most cows are usually slaughtered somewhere around 2-3 years old, and the softest leather, most luxurious leather comes from the hide of cows who are less than a year old. Some cows are not even born before they become victim to the industry. Estimates vary, but according to an EFSA report, on average 3% of dairy cows and 1.5 % of beef cattle, are in their third-trimester of pregnancy when they are slaughtered.
Slaughter procedures vary slightly by country, but a captive bolt pistol shot to the head followed by having their throats slit, while still alive, is standard industry practice. This represents the “best” a slaughtered cow can hope for, but many reports and videos exist that suggest that cows still being alive and conscious while being skinned or dismembered on the production line is not uncommon, some of these reports come from slaughterhouse workers themselves.
5) Leather often involves human exploitation.
The chemicals used to tan leather, and the toxic water that is a byproduct of tanning, affect workers as well as the environment; illness and death due to toxic tanning chemicals is extremely common. Workers across the sector have significantly higher morbidity, largely due to respiratory diseases linked to the chemicals used in the tanning process. Exposure to chromium (for workers and local communities), pentachlorophenol and other toxic pollutants increase the risk of dermatitis, ulcer nasal septum perforation and lung cancer.
Open Democracies report for the Child Labour Action Research Programme shows that there is a startlingly high prevalence of the worst forms of child labour across the entire leather supply chain. Children as young as seven have been found in thousands of small businesses processing leather. This problem is endemic throughout multiple countries supplying the global leather market.
6) Pleather is not a ‘vegan thing’.
Plastic clothing is ubiquitous in fast fashion, and it certainly wasn’t invented for vegans. Plastic leather jackets have been around since before anyone even knew what the word vegan meant, marketing department have begun describing it as ‘vegan leather’ but it’s really no more a vegan thing than polyester is. Most people who wear pleather are not vegan, they just can’t afford to buy cow’s leather, which remains extremely expensive compared to comparable fabrics.
It is striking how anti-vegans consistently talk about how ‘not everyone can afford to eat plant-based’ and criticise vegans for advocating for veganism on that basis, yet none of them seem to mind criticisms directed at people for wearing a far cheaper alternative than leather. You can obviously both be vegan and reduce plastic (as we all should), but vegans wear plastic clothing for the same reason everyone else does: It is cheaper.
7) Plastic is not the only alternative.
When engaging in criticism of pleather, the favourite tactic seems to be drawing a false dilemma where we pretend the only options are plastic and leather. Of course, this is a transparent attempt to draw the debate on lines favourable to advocates of leather, by omitting the fact that you can quite easily just buy neither one.
Alternatives include denim, hemp, cork, fiber, mushroom fiber, cotton, linen, bamboo, recycled plastic, and pinatex, to name a few. There are exceptions in professions like welding, where an alternative can be difficult to source, but nobody needs a jacket, shoes or a bag that looks like leather. For most of us, leather is a luxury item that doesn’t even need to be replaced at all.
8) Leather is not uniquely long-lasting.
The longevity of leather is really the only thing it has going for it, environmentally speaking. Replacing an item less often means fewer purchases, and will likely have a lower environmental impact than one you have to replace regularly. Leather is not unique in this respect, however, and the idea that it is, is mostly just effective marketing.
As your parents will tell you, a well-made denim jacket can last a lifetime. Hemp and bamboo can both last for decades, as can cork and pinatex. Even cotton and linen can last for many years when items are looked after well. While some materials are more hard wearing than others, how long an item will last is mostly the result of how well made the product is and how well it is maintained, not whether or not the item is leather.
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rederiswrites · 7 months
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For the last week or so, I have been quietly but terribly angry about something. And on the whole I think that when you're actively angry it's better to just let things ferment a while in quiet, but here I am.
It started with just a slow drip of things. Country artists being ignored by city art shows. A video recapping and adding to what I already know about how huge corporations created a new serfdom for farmers by monopolizing meat packing, distribution, commodities markets, squeezing farmer's profit margins until many of them go bankrupt, give up, sell to developers--commit suicide. Ah yes. Did you know that farmers and agricultural workers commit suicide at a very high rate? This statistic holds in the US, UK, India, Australia... Then add story after story about Israeli troops and settlers destroying olive trees. Did you know that it takes three years to get the first handful of olives from a tree? That olive trees can live for 500 years?
Did you know that Putin is taking a disproportionate number of his troops from the Siberian country to fight in Ukraine? That way he weakens an ethnic minority while at the same time hiding the full cost of his war from his more important constituents in the western cities.
And then about halfway through a video about the Holodomor, the Killing By Starvation, when Stalin deliberately made Ukrainian peasants take the very worst of the famine created by collectivization, while giving their grain to people in the cities, I realized that I was fucking furious.
Not just about the individual atrocities, all of which deserve my rage of course. No, I was just.... So, so fucking tired of rural people being the invisible dumping grounds of "progress" that has forgotten how life is created and sustained.
That's it. No suggestions, nothing productive, no reason or measure. I'm just angry.
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staticspaces · 5 months
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Live(In) the Life
Check out the video for a complete rundown of this abandoned home!!
youtube
Moving along let's have a look at the kitchen and the living room/dining room area of the main part of the house!!
Once located in a wonderfully quiet rural area surrounded by forest and agricultural land, we find a small street with about 5 abandoned houses. The properties were bought for redevelopment and are currently being replaced with higher density housing.
One of the homes has already been demolished with another house that looks like it had burned down. There are also a few outbuildings on some of the properties along with the remains of a couple vehicles as well as a small motorcycle.
With half of the new development already completed, this area is going through a huge transformation and will never look the same!
Today we will be visiting the final of the three homes, the house was owned by a man named Bill and his wife Christine. They were married very late in life, in fact it was not until 2007 when they tied the knot and at the time, Christine was 69 years old. They both loved cats and had numerous strays make their house a second home, allowing them to come and go as they please through a pet door. They had a good 15 years together as a married couple until Christine passed away in 2022 at the age of 84 in this very house. Bill was by her side the entire time and took care of her in her final days.
Bill had a passion for working with wood dating back to his childhood. He started by selling wooden pens on the side while also working full time as a salesman for 35 years. He would also go on to make a wooden rocking horse for each of his grandchildren.
In 2010 after he had retired, Bill met a wood turner named George who introduced him to a whole new world of woodworking. He bought himself a lathe which was a Canadian Tire special and started a business selling his creations. He also dabbled in fractal burning to give his finished pieces an extra special look. He sold his work online as well as at some of the local artisan markets.
Bill would later pass away, shortly after his wife Christine.
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faejilly · 7 months
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so there's a thing they talk about in permaculture (caveat: I work at a farm but am not a farmer) about how modern industrial & agricultural practices are destructive, (obviously).
And modern environmental & labor groups talk a lot about sustainability which is equally obviously better.
But if we've already destroyed a shit ton of topsoil (which we have the stats are horrifying) we don't just need to sustain what we've got. We need more of it! We need to grow! We need to look for regenerative systems!
Which, yk, is what permaculture is trying to be, but of course it's being implemented by people and people think they're smarter than they are a lot of the time, and get caught up in following the process they like rather than, you know... context and design for each new situation. (Growth for growth's sake is stock markets and cancer, which gets us back to destructive, so obviously we ALSO need to know when to just sustain rather than keep trying to spiral UP.)
...
where was I?
Idk, Thing 2 wanted to go to the library and we just got back and it's been like two hours I have no idea what I was going to talk about. Sorry y'all. Good theories are good! People are people though, so. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
That's apparently all I've got.
...
Tangentially related, the community outreach and farming stuff I've been learning in my apprenticeship has pretty much all been interesting, and the basic office/professional culture skills it also teaches have mostly just validated that I do actually know a lot more about adulting than I thought I did.
But then I had to watch a marketing video and it's talking about identifying your customer and focusing your message so you're talking to them specifically and I'm all
that's it
market segmentation at the global level is the root of much evil, pink tax and being offended when your ACTUAL fans/customers are not the group you thought you were aiming at which has led to so many petty creators breaking all their toys out of spite and is one of the ultimate 'thinking people are things' that Granny warned us about (#gnu terry pratchett) and then I had to take a break from work shit for awhile because that wasn't going to help me write a new resume to show my apprenticeship mentor was it?
also also I had my physical this morning a millionty years ago and have like three different follow-up-things scheduled the next month, I am so tired, *sighs*
how are you today, my dears & darlings?
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{OLIVE COURT INFO DUMP}
Lord: Terranji, The Verdant Conduit
Capital: Oujen
Soul Servants: Olive Gatekeeper, Jinime
Current Court Master: Ketsen Rouju
Current Royal Mage: Verdiette Shan-Suoi
Magich: Earth and Flora
Symbols: Clover (card symbol), teeth, paper fans, lanterns, farming scythes, mouths, plants
Colours allowed to be worn: (green Must Be worn) Black, and gold, white, creams, grey, brown, (can wear any colour but as a small floral accessory) all greens
Rank: standard court
Attire: Dark Pine Green, Black, and gold, traditional Edo period Japanese fashion mixed with Victorian fashion, loose flowing sleeves, loose robe-like jackets, puffy pants/shorts, shows more skin than other courts. (Usually the stomach area and chest, respect to the Olive Lord), tassels, hair done up more often than other courts, tends to not wear shoes
Physical appearance: brown and black hair(common) olive/light olive skin tone (lol), must have green eyes (can be different shades,) softer complexion, Longer hair, Bigger/heavier physiques
Common jobs: Gatekeepers, Gardeners, cooks, apothecarians, tea makers, commissioned outer-court infantry, farmers, herbologists, guides
The Olive Court, is a standard court, ruled by The Olive Lord, the most benevolent and kind lord of six. He has a slow, tired temperament, his presence influencing a sense of calm, lethargic relief. His long, overwhelming brown hair and heavy green robes drag along with him solidifying that sense of lethargy he seems to have, but it’s a beautiful, relaxing one. Ribbons, tassles and fine embroidery cover him and drag along, like he himself is a elegant parade. much of his natural empathy and connective behaviour is, although, stunted by his face. Painted over with a ghostly white, his tired green eye unemotive, face mostly wrapped in bandages covering something unsightly. But despite his unnerving face, he is but the kindest lord, being one of the only to actively speak with his courtiers on their level. Just like him, his people are very emotional. They value the connections and feelings of those around them. Empathetic and Moral based. They are very emotionally wise, similar to the pale courtiers but for them it is intuition, being able to naturally feel shifts in behaviours and intention. They are infamous for cutting ties or ceasing commands with other courts if it goes against their morale or the safety of all parties. You will find that it’s hard to find an olive courtier who is not neighbourly.
Their empathy and kindness can be tied to their affiliation with nature. Being the harbour court of flora and fauna. They have the most expertise in rearing, selling, growing and fostering plants of any kind wether it be for farming and market, or for conservation and research. Their empathy and aural intuition gives them a strong discipline when it comes to caring for their flora. The Olive court is known to be the second biggest court in medical and health research, but unlike their close companions, the scarlets,theirs is much more homeopathic. Apothecaries are a staple, being the second biggest source of income for the court other than farming, the plants and herbs reared being ones of expert quality and potency. Despite having a very dependable market, they are the poorest Court. Due to their infamous habit of pulling out from outsourcing commissioning, they loose a big percentage of their income, but despite other courts frowning down upon it, the people in the court itself aren’t too hard done by. Their is a sense of humility permeating throughout the court, the ability to live by ones own efforts, not the trade of money.
They are not only known for their agriculture but for their fierce duty to protect and defend. With their strong empathy, their gatekeepers guild is commissioned often by other courts to be strong defenders and bodyguards, as they possess a natural, strong inclination to protect, like a mother to a child.
They are well known for being a part in the biggest ally-ship, the Holly Accord, an agreement between the scarlet and Olive court to be members of a tightly woven cultural exchange. Many suspect that the main reason for this alliance is the close nature of the Olive lord and the scarlet lord, their bond being undeniable, but hushed and not outwardly spoken about. They have many sanctioned trade routes and roadways, agreements and cultural holidays that are exclusive to them. Together they form a very strong economic powerhouse when it comes to medical aid and resources.
Region: Gliao (Glee-Ow) is the hottest region in phangoria. The reason for their people’s much more showy and revealing clothing is due to the amount of humid heat that courtier’s experience. The heat isn’t just a con, it has its pros. Being that the airs are filled with humidity, the vegetation and biological diversity is immense. Thousands of flora species that aid in health and vitality, more that can be used for poison and ailments and even plants that kill and devour on their own.
The Wenschi Conservatory is one of the most flora rich places, being a personal conservatory for the Olive Lord. It holds species that are lacking and or going instinct. The Olive Lord spends most of his downtime tending to this Conservatory. Not only is Gliao home to the biggest diversity in biological life, but also to the most beautiful terrains. The winding cliffs and natural spires that emerge from the terrain give home to much of the vegetation, and to Olive Courtiers who build their homes on the edges of cliffs and mountains, thousands of bridges and ropes hanging from cliff to cliff. Most ground sturdy Courts find traversing the towns and cities of gliao to be an arduous task, scared off falling into the abyss like depths of the valleys, but the people of gliao are equipped to deal with such an occurrence, and have the agility to climb back up just as easily. Not to mention how they can terraform in artistic and beautiful ways using teams of manipulation spellcasters. Their home is a sight to behold.
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steampunkforever · 1 year
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Constantine Stuart took his calls in bed that morning. Taking ones calls in bed is not so out of the ordinary as to cause alarm, unless you're Constantine Stuart. To his housekeeper's greater concern was the fact that he had the newspaper brought to his room while taking his calls. The groundskeepers checked the weather broadcast, expecting the moon to have turned to blood with a 60% chance of fire and brimstone. Constantine Stuart would be more likely to throw the balcony window open and inform the world that he'd rediscovered his inner child than order the paper brought to his room.
Stuart was the sort of man who went about his day the same way a hurricane makes landfall, entering the boardrooms he frequented like a battleship at full steam, wearing a purple suit that his housekeeper described to her friends as a "purple suit" with all the juicy connotations those syllabic stresses hold. Stuart was a force of nature more than he was a man, yet here he was answering the phone in his underwear, wearing nothing else but a silk robe and a faded Tampa Beach Yacht Club graphic tee.
The housekeeper would later testify to what snatches of conversation she caught while pretending not to eavesdrop on Stuart's morning phone calls. She indicated that while the content of the calls seemed to involve large sums of money, threats of bodily harm, and the imminent fall of Constantine Stuart's business empire, this was par for the course, citing an incident two months earlier that ended with the unfortunate demise of both the breakfast nook telephone and a previously beautiful Tiffany lamp.
In fact, Stuart's tone was considerably lighter than usual, especially considering the earlier threats of burial beneath the front flowerbeds that Stuart had punctuated by slamming down the receiver and shot-putting the corded telephone into an unsuspecting Art Nouveau glass lampshade. The morning's calls had been grim and even threatening on the other side, but totally incapable of breaking Stuart's almost jubilant mood. The groundskeepers huddled in the back shed and checked the weather radio for alerts from FEMA.
Slamming down the phone (with equal force as but considerably more jubilantly than the norm), Stuart informed the housekeeper that the stock market was going to self immolate like a Ford Pinto on the steps of the NYSE, his no-good brother was using the mafia to try and weasel his way into more of the family inheritance, and that she should open all the windows because he was expecting visitors. The housekeeper hurried downstairs to consider checking the batteries in the Carbon Monoxide detectors.
Constantine Stuart, on the other hand, threw on his comfiest pair of slippers, rushed to the balcony windows, threw them open violently, and promptly had his head split open by a sniper's bullet.
Investigators were never fully able to piece together enough clues to properly indict humpty dumpty back together again, but four distinct things happened that day:
A typo in a Dept. of Agriculture findings report focused on corn subsidies briefly sent the entire American economy into a panic-fueled death spiral lasting the 20 minutes it took for a statement to be released correcting the mistake and returning the wheels of progress to the status quo.
Darius Stuart, Constantine's good for nothing brother, found himself in possession of the entirety of the family fortune as well as the subject of a very complicated murder case centering on the hitman he'd hired to secure said fortune. The case would hinge on the hitman's honest-but-improbable testimony that he'd only intended on slashing some tires and leaving dead animals on the doorstep, a story the jury found just as believable as you do reading this.
Constantine Stuart found his inner child.
Despite my best attempts to diligently track down that one DMV employee who was just SO rude to me, I got the wrong house.
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desudog-gone · 1 year
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Also like let me make one thing clear: I love food and I LOVE cooking and I love fats and carbs and all that shit. Forever. My connection to food involves a deep connection to humanity. And I want to eat more like a human eats. I want to eat more whole foods and more traditional foods and more local foods. Not out of an agenda but because the human connectioness is beautiful to me. I want to put food I'm proud of inside me, I want to put food I can connect with inside me. Not food I ate because it's avaliable. That's some survival instincts shit. I want to eat local jerky and drink local milk and make my own flatbread and eat animals I raised by hand and spent all day processing. I genuinely want this. I would wake up for breakfast for pickled quail egg and whole fat milk. I'm tired of waking up at noon for instant noodles. I'm tired of eating because I'm starving, not eating because I'm excited. The same excitement I get when I'm at the local farm tour or harvesting my vegetable garden. I love food and I love agriculture, I love humanity and our inante connection to food. Among the 4 pillars upholding humanity's evolution, I'm a strong believer that they are 1. Music, 2. Visual art and storytelling, 3. Compassion, and lastly... 4. Food. Our evolution was shaped by these things. Our stomachs shrunk to give more energy to the brain (how we lost much of our ability to process many plants. Scientificically speaking- we evolved towards more nutrients dense and easier to digest; meat)
Idk. I miss the farmers market and the only thing better than local food is backyard food.
God I wish I could bear to eat venison
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blogaarti · 2 years
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Agriculture Tires Market is Projected to Reach US$12.5 Bn by the End of 2027
The global agriculture tires market is anticipated to cross the US$12.5 Bn revenue mark towards the end of 2027, as against US$10 Bn revenue generated in 2022. As per the Fairfield Market Research report, the market is set to witness robust growth, maturing at a sterling CAGR of 4.1%, during the projection timeframe of 2021 – 2027. With a major emphasis on mechanising farming activities, there has been robust development in the domain. After spiralling sales of agriculture tires in the fiscal year of 2022, long-term growth opportunities are likely to prevail in the European region, unlocking new growth prospects for the global agriculture tires industry. Anticipating these trends, a heavy influx of investments is projected to be observed in emerging economies, setting the stage for robust developments across these potential markets.  
 For More Industry Insights Read: https://www.fairfieldmarketresearch.com/report/agriculture-tires-market
 Robust Adoption of High-end Technologies in Developed Economies to Aid Market Expansion 
Paced adoption of tires is being witnessed in the agriculture sector as compared to the mining and construction industries. In recent years there has experienced a surge in the launch of agricultural vehicles. This is majorly attributed to the rising spending capacity of people, especially in developed and developing economies, and an uptick in off-road activities. Such factors are assuring influential growth across the global agriculture tires market. Countries in Europe lack manpower and are extensively rich in arable land. A conducive cultivation environment and incorporation of cutting-edge technologies are translating into numerous opportunities for the region’s agriculture sector. Sophisticated technological developments soundly backed by higher per capita income among the farmers are further fueling the overall market growth. High-end technologies are being leveraged to bolster agricultural revenue and production, catalysing growth across the global agriculture tires market.
 Asia Pacific’s Pace Prevails amid Rising Demand for Food, and Advancements in Farming Technologies 
With accelerated demand from the agricultural sector, Asia Pacific emerges as a regional leader in the global agriculture tires market. China and India are among the frontier nations upholding regional market growth. A rise in manufacturing activities and major developments in farming technologies is spearheading growth across the agricultural industry. This, in turn, increased the demand for agriculture tires in the region. The establishment of manufacturing facilities in the region, the presence of manufacturers, and the low-cost availability of labour are all creating positive market dynamics. Moreover, ease in availability of raw materials, growing demand for food production, and favourable government policies are creating promising outlooks for agricultural industry growth.  
 Prominent Market Players 
Some of the major players holding strong positions in the global agriculture tires market include Titan Tire Corporation, Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd., The Yokohama Rubber Co., Ltd., Bridgestone Corporation, Pirelli & C. S.p.A., Continental Aktiengesellschaft, Trelleborg AB, Compagnie Générale des Établissements Michelin (CGEM), Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Balkrishna Industries Limited, and Prometeon Tyre Group S.r.l.
 Get Sample Copy of Agriculture Tires Market at https://www.fairfieldmarketresearch.com/report/agriculture-tires-market/request-sample
 About Us 
Fairfield Market Research is a UK-based market research provider. Fairfield offers a wide spectrum of services, ranging from customized reports to consulting solutions. With a strong European footprint, Fairfield operates globally and helps businesses navigate through business cycles, with quick responses and multi-pronged approaches. The company values an eye for insightful take on global matters, ably backed by a team of exceptionally experienced researchers. With a strong repository of syndicated market research reports that are continuously published & updated to ensure the ever-changing needs of customers are met with absolute promptness.
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thatdykepunkslut · 2 years
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Because I wrote an entire essay for some guy on discord and I figured might as well put it somewhere someone might actually read it (some things are lacking context but just keep reading the arguments I'm refuting are mostly kneejerk reactions that will be evident from my response):
Capitalism does not address scarcity. It vastly, VASTLY overproduces cheap consumer goods (christmas gift type goods are made in the billions months or even years before the year they're to be sold in, completely divorced from market predictions) while completely neglecting or making unattainably expensive essential goods like high density housing, public transit vehicles, life saving medication, quality food, etc.
Capitalist profit-seeking drives unnsustainable food practices like intensive animal agriculture, monocropping, industrial fertilizer and chemical weeding. Causes cities to implode by building endless suburbs whose tax income does not cover the costs of road and utility maintenance as well as moving industry to areas with cheaper labor and destroying ecosystems with illegal or unregulated dumping and pollution. Insulin is VERY cheap to make and the patent was sold for $1 decades ago. It has gotten more expensive even relative to other expensive medications, soaring dozens of times faster than inflation would imply. After WW2, car companies that made absurd amounts of money off of building tanks and planes then bought up public transit across the US and literally stacked it in a pile and burned it. There's photos of hundreds of burnt out streetcars with Henry Ford (who inspired parts of Mein Kampf and profited off of Jewish slave labor before the war btw) smoking a cigar and looking rather pleased with himself in the foreground. These are just off the top of my head
[9:41 PM]Now for how non-capitalist economies differ:
When removed from the stress of having to earn a living and the desire to accumulate enough to give their children a better life, most people are often very willing to help each other out for free. Under the stress of capitalist workdays (which are literally designed to make you too tired to think, shorter workweeks and workdays have been proven to significantly improve productivity in all sectors), people don't have the energy to spare to help their neighbor. However, pretty much everyone expresses some desire to make the world a better place if they were able. What would you personally do if you didn't have to worry about rent or your next meal or clothes or transportation ever again? Maybe play video games and [redacted] for a week straight but after that? Pretty much everyone is gonna say "hang out with loved ones and cook food."
All necessary forms of labor/work are enjoyable or at least bearable in the name of the greater good to some people. There are people who fucking LOVE picking up trash, like being a sanitation worker is literally the only job they ever want to have. A pretty sizeable chunk of the population enjoys growing plants and taking care of animals and there are methods of farming that require remarkably little effort. Pretty much everyone has a hobby they either currently enjoy or would love to pick up that is required for people to have comfortable lives, but cannot dedicate themselves to it because it would not be profitable enough to live off of
[9:56 PM]decommodifying goods and services fixes this, everyone can do at least one of the things they like doing because there is no threat of violence if you don't work (violence meaning eviction, starvation, freezing to death, etc) In addition to refocusing labor on what actually makes people enjoy their labor, it makes it pretty easy to keep up with demand. "Oh we need more food? Ok well go give people some seeds from the seed library and tools from the tool library. Now we have more food." "We need more clothing? Ok tell the sheperds to let more of their flock have kids and the textile mills to work an extra thirty minutes a day for the next month" (side note, there's finally been developments in automating clothesmaking. Tailoring will be more important after capitalism to ensure clothes are better fitting and last longer but the general forms won't need slave waged third world workers anymore soon)
[9:59 PM]Without states or capitalists to bicker over resources, there's no reason for wars. There will still be some interpersonal violence but without needing drug money to make life bearable (or like, baby formula bc apparently it's violent crime for someone to shoplift baby formula) how often do you think there will be THAT much violent crime? (although various other forms of hierarchy will need to be torn down in order to stop hate crimes like lynchings, mass shootings, and rape)
honestly really the only refutation needed for this as you have worded it is paleontology. Some of our most ancient ancestors have signs of living decades after debilitating injuries that would have rendered them utterly useless to family and unable to care for themselves. This necessitates that they were cared for at great inconvenience for upwards of fifty years tens of thousands of years before the earliest hints of civilization, let alone the currency to pay for a hospice nurse
[10:07 PM]Also, even in the context of mineral mining, without the need for phone companies to sell phones every year, electronics will become much longer lasting and more selectively repairable, meaning less minerals will be removed from use and fewer minerals will be needed to support all the products that are never actually bought in the first place. Even more so with cars, public transit vehicles carry orders of magnitude more people for relatively similar requirements and they don't even NEED conflict minerals in some cases because of overhead electricity being a solution to the tyranny of the battery equation (has someone coined that phrase yet? it seems like a very obvious parallel to the rocket equation now that I think about it but anyways) ok I think I've completely poured my remaining braincells for the day into this I'm gonna take a nap now
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theoldmagoobaddee · 1 year
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THE REALITY OF WORLD HUNGER IN 20 YEARS' TIME
INNOVATIONS IN AGRICULTURE: WHAT THE BILL AND MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION HAVE BEEN INITIATING ALONG WITH R.I.P.E. PROJECT MANAGER, STEPHEN LONG.
THE STATS
☆ The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization says 70% more food will be needed by 2050.
THE 1ST GREEN REVOLUTION
☆ In the mid-twentieth-century, when many parts of the world where nearly starving, the Green Revolution prevented this and 1 billion lives were spared.
☆ This was achieved through irrigation, hybridized seeds and man-made fertilizers and pesticides from industrialized countries, sent to the third world.
THE R.I.P.E. PROJECT
☆ The R.IP.E project is initiating what it hopes will become a revival: egging a twenty-first-century Green Revolution on by genetically engineering crop plant seeds, in order for crop plants to photosynthesize more efficiently.
INEFFICIENT PHOTOSYNTHESIS RATES IN CROP PLANTS AND THE LACK OF DARK GREEN LEAF MATERIAL - THE GAUGE, DETERMINING CHLOROPHYLL CONTENT.
☆ In crop plants, phototosynthesis has been found to be in short supply - with farmers using weak parent plant genes in seeds for the new season's sowing - due to a gap in the evolution of crop plants; as the plants adapt to surrounding plants, bugs ,birds and small animals; ensuring a win over their competitors for sun, water and nutrient-rich and oxygenated soil - photosynthesis necessities and biodiversity fundamentals.
DYNAMIC CONTACT - A TERM USED IN CORPORATE MARKETING
DYNAMIC INTERACTION - The special, symbiotic, beneficial or parasitic relationship between an ecosystem's species, that egg on adaptations in a particular species.
☆ Crop plants are not in the same Dynamic Contact with organisms as eco-system regulars because all and any plants that happen to sprout near or on a crop site are usually uprooted or are treated with herbicides. This is in an effort to keep all available natural resources for the crop plant to make use of alone. Also, due to pesticides/insecticides, crop plants have very little Dynamic Contact with insects, very necessary for the crop plants evolutionary adaptations, as insects teach crop plants how to protect their yield and other functions like maximizing the surface area in the sun but they also pollinate - yes! pollinate! - crop plants.
I think in recent years, it seems, insects have all but died out. No glow-worms, earthworms, dung beetles, fireflies, silkworm and so on. My theory is that we can thank our farm food crop pickers and planters as the pollen would probably get stuck between fingerprint ridges and that is what has been fertilizing many plants.
TIRED SOIL - DEVOID OF NUTRIENTS AS CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS LEAVE BEHIND NITRATE CRYSTALS (300X MORE TOXIC THAN CO2) AND THEIR PRESENCE ALSO KILLS OFF EARTHWORMS - NECESSARY TO OXYGENATE TOPSOIL AND BIO- DEGRADE ORGANIC MATERIALS LEAVING BEHIND NUTRIENTS.
☆ Also, crop plants are usually planted, crop upon crop, year after year, draining the soil of necessary nutrients needed to facilitate photosynthesis.
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Agapanthus leaves, showing the high concentration of chlorophyll, visible through the dark green pigmentation of the leaves.
EVOLUTION WOULD INADVERTENTLYKILL OFF LONE CROP PLANTS.
☆ Evolution's natural selection would focus on survival and reproduction and therefore would focus on pollination. So in theory, for example, the plant would adapt by producing a concentrated but light and maybe sticky, pollen, easily detached by bee legs and snout, thereby maximizing the survival of the crop plant by trying to accelerate population growth rate.
25% MORE CARBON DIOXIDE IN OUR ATMOSPHERE IN THE LAST 50 YEARS. CARBON BASINS, IN THE FORM OF ICEBERGS, FORESTS AND SEA AND RIVERBEDS ARE IMPERITIVE FOR EXCESS CARBON TO BE ABSORBED. REFORESTATION PROJECTS WILL ABSORB THIS INCREASE IN CARBON DIOXIDE.
☆ In the last 50 years, a major molecule needed in photosynthesis - carbon dioxide - has increased in our atmosphere, by 25%.
☆ The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has funded the genetic engineering of crop seeds in order to increase food production, globally.
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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation logo
☆ In the tobacco plant leaf there is a stoma which enables gaseous exchange which, during a drought, would retain water. Hoping that the gene responsible for the tobacco plant's stoma function could be implanted in the crop plant and assist to shed heat energy, emanating from a moistureless, evaporated surface and topsoil and atmosphere quicker, genetic engineers have attempted to isolate the gene responsible for the tobacco plant's stoma and insert it into crop plants.
☆ After genetic engineers at R.I.P.E. transferred genes from the Thale Cress plant - three variants thereof - they had crop yields that were increased by 30%, 19.5% and 20%.
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Thale Cress
GENETICALLY ENGINEERED THALE CRESS IS A WATERWISE G.M. PLANT.
☆ The same amount of water was used for genetically engineered plants, compared to the parent plant that had not been modified yet, and only 1% more nitrogen was used by the GM Thale Cress.
WE CAN CONCLUDE THAT INDOOR FOOD GROWING WOULD NOT BE TAXING ON AVAILABLE WATER SUPPLY.
☆ Photosynthesis is a complex procedure which requires over 160 discrete steps. The program used for dreaming up potential combinations of genetic engineering - taking one species useful characteristics and then inserting the gene responsible and inserting it into another species lacking that particular function - has been attempting billions of manipulations, mathematically and in a Latin kind of way, depending on what is possible and hopefully solutions will be made commercially available soon.
My personal opinion is that in order to reduce heat energy in the atmosphere, we need to:
1. Blow up rock formations. Use smaller paving tiles and bricks etc. and use an organic or non heat conductive grout in between.
2. Stop using chemical fertillizer altogether, as the Nitrate crystals left behind are also big conductors of heat. It also kills off earthworms, who cool the soil with their oxygen by-product.
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3. Use the gene that generate the leaves of the Agapanthus or the Arum Lily. In addition, if the Arum lily rhyzome root system gene can be implanted in the crop plant; the seed then mixed with a tree that produces a lot of shade but mottled shade (maybe making mini trees the same height as the crop plant) and establishes it's roots deeper down in the soil than the crop plant and then, lastly, the stuff on the ends of those backscrubbers from Zimbabwe; I think it's called whittles; if those 3 species could be joined to the crop plant seed (a 4-in-1 kind of seed) we would have some shade, bio-diversity and the rhyzome "creeper" root that sprouts the plant in a planter's ROW, saving space inbetween; maximizing yield and covering bare earth. The whittles will act as a filter between the sun and moisture in the topsoil as well as act as a carbon basin foundation.
The farmer would also never have to pull out harvest plant leftovers or burn the field as the root system would make the crop plant an evergreen plant, meaning it would not have to be sowed and cut down - only the harvest fruits removed; which would/could produce food all year, potentially.
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Source -
The Plant Whisperer pg.62 Interesting Magazine 46/2019
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chiveburger · 2 years
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pleasuh... all the korean men I love not being in solely romantic comedy dramas is giving me a stomach ulcer. In jo jungsuk’s case I know he had a love line in hospital playlist and the series is good, but I really don’t want to watching a medical drama. moreover, he’s a new father. I’ll let him slide for not doing shit as of late. choi jinhyuk just got out of a controversy for going to a brothel or some shit so he’s playing it safe by being a fucking ACCOUNTANT in his new drama so maybe for publicity reasons I’ll understand too but ju jihoon? why the fuck is ju jihoon not doing shit. this motherfucker is so funny and hot and good at acting in every genre I need him to be in either hyena 2 or the new princess hours remake OR just any other sort of romantic comedy. I’m tired of seeing him climb a mountain. I know he’s set to be in a new drama with han hyo joo, and I am mildly excited but part of me feel like it’s serious. “set in an era where humans only consume cultured meat produced by in labs, the series revolves around mysteries related to the heads of genetic engineering company BF group which dominates the cellular agriculture market. ju portrays soldier-turned-bodyguard woo chae-woon, and han portrays BF group founder and CEO yoon ja-yu” ummmmmm... peta wrote this drama. I don’t know why this is randomly reminding me of cinderella sister where moon geun young becomes the head of her meat business? makgeolli business? and chun jungmyung becomes some spy slash bodyguard. I’m projecting but if it's anything like cinderella sister I’ll shit my pants, if not I don’t know what the intention of this drama will be then.
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staticspaces · 5 months
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Live(In) the Life
Check out the video for the full tour!!
youtube
Let's start off this brand new location by taking a look at the live-in quarters of this abandoned house!!
Once located in a wonderfully quiet rural area surrounded by forest and agricultural land, we find a small street with about 5 abandoned houses. The properties were bought for redevelopment and are currently being replaced with higher density housing.
One of the homes has already been demolished with another house that looks like it had burned down. There are also a few outbuildings on some of the properties along with the remains of a couple vehicles as well as a small motorcycle.
With half of the new development already completed, this area is going through a huge transformation and will never look the same!
Today we will be visiting the final of the three homes, the house was owned by a man named Bill and his wife Christine. They were married very late in life, in fact it was not until 2007 when they tied the knot and at the time, Christine was 69 years old. They both loved cats and had numerous strays make their house a second home, allowing them to come and go as they please through a pet door. They had a good 15 years together as a married couple until Christine passed away in 2022 at the age of 84 in this very house. Bill was by her side the entire time and took care of her in her final days.
Bill had a passion for working with wood dating back to his childhood. He started by selling wooden pens on the side while also working full time as a salesman for 35 years. He would also go on to make a wooden rocking horse for each of his grandchildren.
In 2010 after he had retired, Bill met a wood turner named George who introduced him to a whole new world of woodworking. He bought himself a lathe which was a Canadian Tire special and started a business selling his creations. He also dabbled in fractal burning to give his finished pieces an extra special look. He sold his work online as well as at some of the local artisan markets.
Bill would later pass away, shortly after his wife Christine.
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diptinaik · 12 hours
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