Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Pulp and paper factory off of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, British Columbia
Large factory structure with smoke from production process rising up polluting atmosphere at manufacturing yard. Industrial site at sunset.
Native Americans fishing for salmon in Columbia River between lumber mill in Washington state and marina in Rainier OR
Photo Taken In Tacoma, Washington
Directly above an oil refinery along the Houston Ship Channel shot via helicopter from an altitude of about 600 feet.
Longview, Washington State, USA. The Lewis and Clark Bridge crossing the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon. The top of Mount St. Helens in the background.
Machingery at the Port of Tacoma in Washington State.
Crofton, B.C.
Chiba's industrial area as seen from \
Tug passing by a pulp and paper factory off of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, British Columbia
Photo Taken In Tacoma, Washington
Aerial panorama of an oil refinery near Anacortes, a small city on Fidalgo Island in Washington State.
Industrial Teesside taken from Hartlepool
Lakeside steel mill on a cloudy autumn day. Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Baltimore, USA - February 18, 2024. City view of Baltimore from Federal Hill Park, Maryland, USA
An excavator works to infill a harbour while a factory grinds away in the distance.
Steam rise from a factory in Tacaoma, Washington.
Factory fumes pollute the environment
Pulp and paper factory off of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, British Columbia
Photo Taken In Tacoma, Washington
Office building on waterway and industrial area of Port of Tacoma om Commencement Bay in Washington state
Industrial plant with tall smokestacks releasing steam or smoke into a cloudy sky
Emissions from factory or powerplant making air pollution. Smoke released by chimneys poisoning environment. Ecology, preserve nature, climate change concept.
Smokestacks over water from afar
Industrial city skyline, Quebec City, Canada
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.
Aluminum factory at dusk, coastline in San Cibrao, Lugo province, A MariƱa area, Galicia, Spain.
A view of the Port of Tacoma from Ruston, Washington.
Large factory with smoke from chimneys under sunrise light
Free Images: "bestof:SMOKE FROM ST. REGIS KRAFT PULP MILL CONTRIBUTES TO SMOG THAT HOVERS OVER TACOMA'S INDUSTRIAL WATERFRONT - NARA - 552182.tif Scope and content General notes"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day