Key Question definition

Key Question. How best to organize the value chain from the processing facility to the vendors and to standardize operations to maximize both profit and the value proposition to stakeholders – farmers, employees, vendors and customers? Methodology: Deliverables: Date Deliverable/Work Responsible Party
Key Question. 2: Are environmental media significant sources of nanomaterial exposure for humans? What are these media and what are primary routes of exposure? Do we have important data gaps? Key Question 3: Are harmonised tests to assess the release of nanomaterials from products during the life cycle needed for regulatory assessment? What are the main data gaps for consumer product/product matrices or nanomaterials in terms of release? What harmonized test methods already exist and what tests need to be developed? (e.g. ageing: UV, humidity, heat, abrasion, mouthing, etc.)?

Examples of Key Question in a sentence

  • Dispatch occurs at a given point during the Key Question sequence depending on severity and is usually either Advanced Life Support or Intermediate Life Support Priority 1.

  • ProQA Determinant: Charlie Serious but unstable – Allows for recognition of serious conditions not immediately Life threatening and Dispatch occurs at a given point during the Key Question sequence depending on severity and is usually either Advanced Life Support or Intermediate Life Support Priority 1 or 2.

  • ProQA Determinant: Bravo Serious but stable – Allows for recognition of conditions not immediately critical and Dispatch occurs at a given point during the Key Question sequence depending on severity and is usually either, Advanced Life Support, Intermediate Life Support or Basic Life Support Priority 1 or 2.

  • The variable performance of PSTA sediments indicated that the effect of the accrued layer in the PSTA cell is yet poorly defined, and requires further investigation (Key Question #2).

  • The effective TP removal observed for the prior mesocosm study (described above) on an unfarmed, muck substrate (~ 180 mg P/Kg), suggests that partial muck removal (or soil inversion) on previously farmed lands may only be effective if the TP levels in the underlying muck are quite low (Key Question #4).

  • In this Key Question a framework of the EU-Countries National Feed-in Tariff Plan is presented, in order to evaluate if GAHP installation and use is promoted by local authorities and utilities thanks to discounts and special tariffs.

  • Consequently, two Key Question have been added to the European Polar Priorities list, addressing the fundamental biological processes from the organism to community level in Polar regions and the major threats and implications of changing biodiversity in Polar regions.

  • Continued operation of this mesocosm platform should produce guidance for establishing target operating depths and PLRs for full-scale PSTA deployments (Key Question #1), with process-level understanding of light effects and P loading on periphyton growth, enzyme production and P uptake (Question #3).

  • Key Question development will include PICOT(S), analytic framework, inclusion and exclusion criteria, and references.

  • This indicates that a limerock substrate, per se, is not necessary to obtain ultra-low (≤ 13 µg/L) TP concentrations (Key Question #4), but that the organic substrate, if present, must contain sufficiently low total P levels (and presumably, small pools of labile P).

Related to Key Question