Posts Tagged ‘sustainable’

Posted by hugo at 10 December 2009

Category: Research

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Green algae known as Cladophora

Green algae known as Cladophora

A new biodegradable battery made of cellulose promises to offer thin, flexible, lightweight, inexpensive and environmentally-friendly batteries made without metal parts.

The battery is made from green algae known as Cladophora, found along freshwater beaches around the world.

The key to the battery’s success is its large surface area. Made from algae-derived cellulose with 100 times the surface area of the cellulose found in sheets of notebook paper, the battery can manage far more conducting polymer than in previous incarnations.

That means better recharge, hold and discharge capabilities.

Source: Smart Planet

Posted by hugo at 10 December 2009

Category: News

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Samsø

Samsø

The Danish island of Samsø has become one of the first industrialized places on Earth to qualify as completely energy self-sufficient.

The tiny island — just 30 miles long and 15 miles wide — first began its push toward sustainability in 1997. In just over a decade, Samsø erected 21 electricity-producing wind turbines and a heating system fueled by wood chip- and straw-burning furnaces accompanied by several small solar panels.

Eleven of Samsø’s turbines are onshore and ten are offshore; all generate one megawatt each. The onshore turbines produce more electricity than the island consumes — enough to offset 690,000 gallons of oil — while the offshore turbines produce enough power to handle the island’s transportation energy budget.

Source: Smart Planet

Posted by hugo at 3 December 2009

Category: News

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Perhaps the most significant limit to future energy supplies is the “net energy” factor—the requirement that energy systems yield more energy than is invested in their construction and operation.

THIS REPORT IS INTENDED as a non-technical examination of a basic question: Can any combination of known energy sources successfully supply society’s energy needs at least up to the year 2100? In the end, we are left with the disturbing conclusion that all known energy sources are subject to strict limits of one kind or another. Conventional energy sources such as oil, gas, coal, and nuclear are either at or nearing the limits of their ability to grow in annual supply, and will dwindle as the decades proceed—but in any case they are unacceptably hazardous to the environment. And contrary to the hopes of many, there is no clear practical scenario by which we can replace the energy from today’s conventional sources with sufficient energy from alternative sources to sustain industrial society at its present scale of operations. To achieve such a transition would require (1) a vast financial investment beyond society’s practical abilities, (2) a very long time—too long in practical terms—for build-out, and (3) significant sacrifices in terms of energy quality and reliability.

Perhaps the most significant limit to future energy supplies is the “net energy” factor—the requirement that energy systems yield more energy than is invested in their construction and operation. There is a strong likelihood that future energy systems, both conventional and alternative, will have higher energy input costs than those that powered industrial societies during the last century.We will come back to this point repeatedly.

The report explores some of the presently proposed energy transition scenarios, showing why, up to this time, most are overly optimistic, as they do not address all of the relevant limiting factors to the expansion of alternative energy sources. Finally, it shows why energy conservation (using less energy, and also less resource materials) combined with humane, gradual population decline must become primary strategies for achieving sustainability.

Read the full report: Download the PDF (2.61 MB)

Source: Energy Bulletin

Posted by hugo at 20 November 2009

Category: News

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Green projects

Green projects

A total of 112 green-power projects are under way in Africa.

Of these, 28 are taking place in South Africa, or are in the process of either being registered or applying for registration under the Kyoto Protocol’s so-called CDM (clean development mechanism), declared a statement from the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) on Wednesday.

Two of these projects awaiting registration in South Africa are solar-heated water systems.

CDM projects range from the development of renewable energy sources to the planting of trees.

More than 80% of all CDM projects in Africa are located in sub-Saharan Africa.

The projects include the replacement of conventional electric light bulbs with energy-efficient bulbs in Senegal, and developing a municipal dumping ground in Uganda where power can be generated.

According to Unep there were 78 CDM projects in Africa in 2008, but in 2004 only two.

In Asia there are 3 700 live projects and in Latin America just over 820.

Across the world 4 730 CDM projects are either in progress or waiting for approval.
Source: Fin24

Posted by hugo at 16 November 2009

Category: News

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Water, our most precious resource

Water, our most precious resource

Sometimes, in our struggling to apply sustainability strategy to things of industry — electricity in particular — we forget about protecting the simpler, more basic stuff, like water.

Based on what I’m hearing recently from some of the largest high-tech companies, this isn’t an oversight we’ll be able to tolerate for much longer. I’d be willing to lay odds that you will start hearing just as much about water management during 2010 as you’ll hear about the smart grid and carbon management.

Two examples from just the past week:

  • Hewlett-Packard has come out big as a sponsor of Summit on the Summit: Kiliminjaro, a celebrity-driven climb that is intended to raise awareness of the “global clean water crisis.” For every view of videos on its Summit on the Summit Facebook page, HP will contribute 100 liters of clean water. It’s a unique example of how you can use social media to promote a worthy cause AND your brand at the same time.
  • On the more tactical side, IBM just announced three different relationships illustrating how its resource management software and technology can be applied to the water problem. The first relationship is with the Lower Colorado River Authority, a public non-profit that manages water supply and other resources across Central and South Texas. The utility is specifically using IBM Maximo Asset Management software along with a mobile application that was developed by one of its business partners, Syclo. Here’s more information. In a second agreement (worth $14.5 million to IBM), the company is designing an asset management system for Power and Water Corp. in Sydney Australia. The arrangement will focus on how to balance the utility’s very diverse geographic territory, which ranges from desert to tropic climates. The final deal is with the Fukuoka District Waterworks Agency in Japan, which plans to use IBM technology to help design a system for increasing the availability of the usable water supply and to improve water quality in communities across its district. Among the district’s assets are the Seawater Desalination Plant, which supports 2.3 million residents. Here’s more information about the system.

Source: Smart Planet