Dr. Pimentel graduated from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1992. He works in Boston, MA and specializes in Cardiovascular Disease. Dr. Pimentel is affiliated with Boston Medical Center.
Sales Manager, Latin America at Transport Auminum Inc.
Location:
Tijuana Area, Mexico
Industry:
Mining & Metals
Work:
Transport Auminum Inc. - Greater Los Angeles Area--Mexico since Jun 2012
Sales Manager, Latin America
Transport Aluminum, Subsidiary of Peng Cheng Jan 2011 - Nov 2012
Regional Sales Manager, Mexico
Peng Cheng Aluminum Enterprise, Inc 2004 - Jan 2011
Senior Sales Representative
Indalex Aluminum Solutions 2003 - 2004
Sales Representative
Education:
California State University-Fullerton 1994 - 1997
BA, International Busines
Cerritos College 1989 - 2004
Associates of Arts, Business Administration
Skills:
Selling Marketing International Business New Business Development Negotiation Contract Negotiation Logistics Business Planning Business Strategy Product Development Purchasing Supply Chain Management
David Pimentel of Cornell Universitys College of Agriculture and Life Sciences says the grain used to feed U.S. livestock could feed 800 million people if fed directly to them. He calculates that raising animals for protein requires more than eight times as much fossil fuel as the equivalent in pla
On conventional farms, the nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium plants need to grow are added to the soil in chemical form each season, and, according to David Pimentel, an emeritus professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell University, each season, excess fertilizers leach into the water.
Every gallon of ethanol created wastes energy. David Pimentel at Cornell University and Tad Patzek at the University of California, Berkeley estimate that making ethanol from corn requires twenty-nine percent more fossil energy than the ethanol fuel itself actually contains. Additionally, eth