large scale energy efficiencies or other resource savings

Prepare a review/essay of length 1400 – 1800 words (excluding abstract and references) in which you investigate, critically analyse, and provide clear understanding and insight into a way of either achieving large-scale energy efficiencies or large-scale savings of other resources such as water. Examples include alternative methods of electricity generation, substitution of fossil fuels, ways of reducing electrical or other energy use in industry, and changes in industrial processes. Illustrate your review with a case study. Include a final paragraph that summarises your findings and/or recommendations.

Your essay must include evidence of research into the topic.
Make sure that you use high quality reference material to provide sound evidence in support of the arguments put forward in your essay. In particular, check for the existence of relevant national or international standards. Be very circumspect about using material gained from the internet.
Quotations must be used correctly, and references must be cited within the essay and listed in full detail at the end of the essay

Abstract/summary
Your review/essay must include an abstract. Be sure you understand the purpose of an abstract and ensure that it contains adequate specific information to be of value to the reader. In particular, include the key findings or outcomes of your investigation. Refer to the section “What is an Abstract?” below.

Students are strongly encouraged to submit their work to TurnItIn, to check that they have not made excessive use of the material of others, and that they have correctly acknowledged all sources of information. When submitting your work, do not use a cover sheet.

Please refer to the exemplar on the Learnonline site to see how information from external sources has been obtained, used and referenced.

Feedback on this assessment may be provided by annotation of the review/essay.

What is an abstract?

An abstract is a succinct, stand-alone, coherent and objective summary of the essence of a paper or report. It focuses on new contributions, both analysis and synthesis, that advance knowledge and understanding. An abstract may be the reader’s first contact with the report and its contents, and should therefore provide sufficient information for them to determine whether they wish to read the report in full.

An abstract is not a review or evaluation of the work, but a dispassionate and objective statement of the key material in the report. While it summarises key elements of the full paper or report, it is likely to be even more concise than the conclusions or executive summary.

When writing an abstract, use explicit language, rather than generalisations, and utilise key words that will assist someone searching electronically for your work. While avoiding the use of ‘I’ or ‘we’, do use active verbs in preference to the ‘passive voice’. For example, “the investigators examined . . .” rather than “. . . was examined in the investigation”. Do not use nebulous statements that convey information of little value such as “Financial and social implications will be considered”.

An abstract could be written in the past tense as it is reporting on completed work. Alternatively, it is permissible to use the present tense, such as “the report examines . . .”. It is also quite appropriate to use the present tense to describe results or findings that have ongoing applicability and relevance.

The abstract normally needs to include
the purpose of the report,
the objectives, including an outline of the problem that was investigated,
the context in which the investigation has been done (perhaps identifying the areas of applicability, or noting any significant assumptions),
the scope and relevance of the investigation,
methods employed in the investigation,
results, key findings (and their interpretation), outcomes,
key contributions (if the report is on original work),
conclusions and, if appropriate, recommendations.
The abstract should highlight the implications and significance of the outcomes and their actual or potential benefits to the principal stakeholders.

hi
in this essay the abstract has to be perfect and about 500 words.
i need about 5-10 references
it a professional engineering work so please make sure dont copy anythings from the internet (use your own words )
use Harvard references
please make sure that the abstract include
The abstract normally needs to include
the purpose of the report,
the objectives, including an outline of the problem that was investigated,
the context in which the investigation has been done (perhaps identifying the areas of applicability, or noting any significant assumptions),
the scope and relevance of the investigation,
methods employed in the investigation,
results, key findings (and their interpretation), outcomes,
key contributions (if the report is on original work),
conclusions and, if appropriate, recommendations.

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