Trabalho rural e saude: intoxicacoes por agrotoxicos no municipio de Teresopolis-RJ
In: Revista de economia e sociologia rural: Brazilian review of agricultural economics and rural sociology, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 685-701
ISSN: 0103-2003
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In: Revista de economia e sociologia rural: Brazilian review of agricultural economics and rural sociology, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 685-701
ISSN: 0103-2003
International audience ; Field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) can offer invaluable computational performance for many compute-intensive algorithms. However, to justify their purchase and administration costs it is necessary to maximize resource utilization over their expected lifetime. Making FPGAs available in a cloud environment would make them attractive to new types of users and applications and help democratize this increasingly popular technology. However, there currently exists no satisfactory technique for offering FPGAs as cloud resources and sharing them between multiple tenants. We propose FPGA groups, which are seen by their clients as a single virtual FPGA, and which aggregate the computational power of multiple physical FPGAs. FPGA groups are elastic, and they may be shared among multiple tenants. We present an autoscaling algorithm to maximize FPGA groups' resource utilization and reduce user-perceived computation latencies. FPGA groups incur a low overhead in the order of 0.09ms per submitted task. When faced with a challenging workload, the autoscaling algorithm increases resource utilization from 52% to 61% compared to a static resource allocation, while reducing task execution latencies by 61%.
BASE
International audience ; Field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) can offer invaluable computational performance for many compute-intensive algorithms. However, to justify their purchase and administration costs it is necessary to maximize resource utilization over their expected lifetime. Making FPGAs available in a cloud environment would make them attractive to new types of users and applications and help democratize this increasingly popular technology. However, there currently exists no satisfactory technique for offering FPGAs as cloud resources and sharing them between multiple tenants. We propose FPGA groups, which are seen by their clients as a single virtual FPGA, and which aggregate the computational power of multiple physical FPGAs. FPGA groups are elastic, and they may be shared among multiple tenants. We present an autoscaling algorithm to maximize FPGA groups' resource utilization and reduce user-perceived computation latencies. FPGA groups incur a low overhead in the order of 0.09ms per submitted task. When faced with a challenging workload, the autoscaling algorithm increases resource utilization from 52% to 61% compared to a static resource allocation, while reducing task execution latencies by 61%.
BASE
International audience ; Europe accounts for around 20% of the global cereal production and is a net exporter of ca. 15% of that production. Increasing global demand for cereals justifies questions as to where and by how much Europe's production can be increased to meet future global market demands, and how much additional nitrogen (N) crops would require. The latter is important as environmental concern and legislation are equally important as production aims in Europe. Here, we used a country-by-country, bottom-up approach to establish statistical estimates of actual grain yield, and compare these to modelled estimates of potential yields for either irrigated or rainfed conditions. In this way, we identified the yield gaps and the opportunities for increased cereal production for wheat, barley and maize, which represent 90% of the cereals grown in Europe. The combined mean annual yield gap of wheat, barley, maize was 239 Mt, or 42% of the yield potential. The national yield gaps ranged between 10 and 70%, with small gaps in many north-western European countries, and large gaps in eastern and south-western Europe. Yield gaps for rainfed and irrigated maize were consistently lower than those of wheat and barley. If the yield gaps of maize, wheat and barley would be reduced from 42% to 20% of potential yields, this would increase annual cereal production by 128 Mt (39%). Potential for higher cereal production exists predominantly in Eastern Europe, and half of Europe's potential increase is located in Ukraine, Romania and Poland. Unlocking the identified potential for production growth requires a substantial increase of the crop N uptake of 4.8 Mt. Across Europe, the average N uptake gaps, to achieve 80% of the yield potential, were 87, 77 and 43 kg N ha(-1) for wheat, barley and maize, respectively. Emphasis on increasing the N use efficiency is necessary to minimize the need for additional N inputs. Whether yield gap reduction is desirable and feasible is a matter of balancing Europe's role in global food ...
BASE
International audience ; Europe accounts for around 20% of the global cereal production and is a net exporter of ca. 15% of that production. Increasing global demand for cereals justifies questions as to where and by how much Europe's production can be increased to meet future global market demands, and how much additional nitrogen (N) crops would require. The latter is important as environmental concern and legislation are equally important as production aims in Europe. Here, we used a country-by-country, bottom-up approach to establish statistical estimates of actual grain yield, and compare these to modelled estimates of potential yields for either irrigated or rainfed conditions. In this way, we identified the yield gaps and the opportunities for increased cereal production for wheat, barley and maize, which represent 90% of the cereals grown in Europe. The combined mean annual yield gap of wheat, barley, maize was 239 Mt, or 42% of the yield potential. The national yield gaps ranged between 10 and 70%, with small gaps in many north-western European countries, and large gaps in eastern and south-western Europe. Yield gaps for rainfed and irrigated maize were consistently lower than those of wheat and barley. If the yield gaps of maize, wheat and barley would be reduced from 42% to 20% of potential yields, this would increase annual cereal production by 128 Mt (39%). Potential for higher cereal production exists predominantly in Eastern Europe, and half of Europe's potential increase is located in Ukraine, Romania and Poland. Unlocking the identified potential for production growth requires a substantial increase of the crop N uptake of 4.8 Mt. Across Europe, the average N uptake gaps, to achieve 80% of the yield potential, were 87, 77 and 43 kg N ha(-1) for wheat, barley and maize, respectively. Emphasis on increasing the N use efficiency is necessary to minimize the need for additional N inputs. Whether yield gap reduction is desirable and feasible is a matter of balancing Europe's role in global food security, farm economic objectives and environmental targets.
BASE
In: European Journal of Agronomy (101), 109-120. (2018)
Europe accounts for around 20% of the global cereal production and is a net exporter of ca. 15% of that production. Increasing global demand for cereals justifies questions as to where and by how much Europe's production can be increased to meet future global market demands, and how much additional nitrogen (N) crops would require. The latter is important as environmental concern and legislation are equally important as production aims in Europe. Here, we used a country-by-country, bottom-up approach to establish statistical estimates of actual grain yield, and compare these to modelled estimates of potential yields for either irrigated or rainfed conditions. In this way, we identified the yield gaps and the opportunities for increased cereal production for wheat, barley and maize, which represent 90% of the cereals grown in Europe. The combined mean annual yield gap of wheat, barley, maize was 239 Mt, or 42% of the yield potential. The national yield gaps ranged between 10 and 70%, with small gaps in many north-western European countries, and large gaps in eastern and south-western Europe. Yield gaps for rainfed and irrigated maize were consistently lower than those of wheat and barley. If the yield gaps of maize, wheat and barley would be reduced from 42% to 20% of potential yields, this would increase annual cereal production by 128 Mt (39%). Potential for higher cereal production exists predominantly in Eastern Europe, and half of Europe's potential increase is located in Ukraine, Romania and Poland. Unlocking the identified potential for production growth requires a substantial increase of the crop N uptake of 4.8 Mt. Across Europe, the average N uptake gaps, to achieve 80% of the yield potential, were 87, 77 and 43 kg N ha(-1) for wheat, barley and maize, respectively. Emphasis on increasing the N use efficiency is necessary to minimize the need for additional N inputs. Whether yield gap reduction is desirable and feasible is a matter of balancing Europe's role in global food security, farm economic objectives and environmental targets.
BASE