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Essen, North Rhine Westphalia, Germany, 1959. Krupp cast steel factory in Essen.
Industrial emissions causing damage to the environment.
Smog in thé street
View of the abandoned Fundidora steel mill as seen in the 1980s before the area was turned into a city park for Monterrey Mexico
An aerial grayscale shot of an industrial site with smoke coming out of it
An excavator works to infill a harbour while a factory grinds away in the distance.
Power Station monochrom
Hamilton, Ontario - Smoke from Steel Mill
Operational blast furnace of Tata steel factory in IJmuiden, Netherlands, on a rainy and overcast day
Aerial view steel mill. Dust cloud from a blast furnace.
At around East Urawa station on the Musashino line opened
Wind Blowing Pollution
Air polluted by Sponge Iron Industry.
Aerial view of a thermal power plant in the twilight
The Industry sector produces the goods and raw materials we use every day. The greenhouse gases emitted during industrial production are split into two categories: direct emissions that are produced at the facility, and indirect emissions that occur off site, but are associated with the facility's use of energy.\n\nDirect emissions are produced by burning fuel for power or heat, through chemical reactions, and from leaks from industrial processes or equipment. Most direct emissions come from the consumption of fossil fuels for energy. A smaller amount, roughly a third, come from leaks from natural gas and petroleum systems, the use of fuels in production (e.g., petroleum products used to make plastics), and chemical reactions during the production of chemicals, iron and steel, and cement.\n\nIndirect emissions are produced by burning fossil fuel at a power plant to make electricity, which is then used by an industrial facility to power industrial buildings and machinery.
Grain Silo Bins in dense fog. Aerial shot
Steel industry in IJmuiden near Amsterdam in the Netherlands
Aerial view of steel making industry. Steel mill with chimneys and blast furnace installations next to a coking plant with a steaming quench tower. The coking plant produces coke which is used by the neighbouring steel mill; by-products are coke oven gas and coal tar.  Schwelgern in Duisburg, Germany.
Factory Emitting Smoke Against Sky
Industrial aluminium factory Aerial view of San Cibrao Galicia Spain
Smoke coming from industrial waste. using new technology to clean it before dispersing. Industrial panoramic landmark, blast furnance of metallurgical production. Concept of environmental pollution. High quality photo
Smokestacks over water from afar
Coal power plant and environmental pollution
Factory fumes pollute the environment
Wind Blowing Pollution
Smoke and toxic gas to air pollution from industry
View from top of the Yokohama Landmark Tower, height 296.3 mt, of the Petroleum plant on Isogo Ward on Tokyo Bay in Yokohama, the capital city and the most populous city in Kanagawa Prefecture, with a 2020 population of 3.8 million.
Ufa, Russia - July 12, 1969: Firemen at the fire-fighting operations training uptown Ufa extinguish the wall of fire. The exercise was conducted on the basis of ignition of oil in the pit. In extinguishing were involved forces of the fire Department of the city district of Ufa.
Steel steel mill in Velsen close to the North Sea coast and port of IJmuiden. The Hoogovens steel mill is one of the major polluters in the Netherlands in terms of CO2, nitrogen and heavy metals such as lead and mercury and residents around the Hoogovens, have been concerned for some time about carcinogenic substances falling into the area.
Free Images: "bestof:SMOKE FROM THE NEIGHBORING STEEL PLANT SETTLES ON EVERYTHING. THE MIXTURE OF RAIN, WATER AND THE FERROUS OXIDE IN THE... - NARA - 545469.tif Scope and content"
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