
Ravi Naidu
Articles
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Sep 16, 2024 |
routledge.com | Ravi Naidu
1. Minerals Industry: Risks, Impacts and Managing Derelict Mines – International PerspectiveRavi Naidu and Peter Sanderson2. Balancing Sustainable Development: Assessing Global Environmental Risks in the Mineral Industry OperationsRamkrishna Nirola, Ravi Naidu and Alvin Lal3. Derelict Mine Sites – Australian PerspectiveGirish Choppala and Ravi Naidu4. Managing Orphaned and Abandoned Mines – A Canadian PerspectiveG.A. Tremblay and C.M. Hogan5.
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Mar 14, 2024 |
thelancet.com | Courtney Lane |Ravi Naidu |Tracey Young-Sharma |Matthew Richards
Research in contextAntimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a growing public health threat globally. In Fiji, the burden of AMR has not been fully investigated. Available data from outbreak investigations showed high rates of healthcare associated infections from multidrug resistant (MDR) organisms. There is a need to better understand the antimicrobial susceptibility profile of common bacterial pathogens and describe the type and rates of MDR bacterial pathogens in Fiji.
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Mar 16, 2023 |
remediation-technology.com | Ravi Naidu
They stop your food from sticking to the pan. They prevent stains in clothes and carpets. They help firefighting foam to extinguish fires. But the very thing that makes “forever chemicals” so useful also makes them dangerous. Forever chemicals – the catchier name for the class of chemicals known as PFAS, per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances – don’t break down in the environment. Since we invented and began using them in the 1940s, these chemicals have stuck around, contaminating water and soil.
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Feb 17, 2023 |
dailybulletin.com.au | Ravi Naidu
They stop your food from sticking to the pan. They prevent stains in clothes and carpets. They help firefighting foam to extinguish fires. But the very thing that makes “forever chemicals” so useful also makes them dangerous. Forever chemicals – the catchier name for the class of chemicals known as PFAS, per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances – don’t break down in the environment. Since we invented and began using them in the 1940s, these chemicals have stuck around, contaminating water and soil.
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Feb 15, 2023 |
phys.org | Ravi Naidu
They stop your food from sticking to the pan. They prevent stains in clothes and carpets. They help firefighting foam to extinguish fires. But the very thing that makes "forever chemicals" so useful also makes them dangerous.
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