If you build it, they will come.
An innovative effort to change the world and offer opportunities where none would have existed before.
German scientists are researching ways to use all of extra CO2 to make fuel. All they have to do is enable benzene molecules to grab the oxygen atom from the CO2 in carbamate, producing phenol and a reactive carbon monoxide (CO) species.
When asked by a reporter which was his favourite of the 12 projects, Monte Solberg, Minister of Human Resources and Social Development, said “The Now House retrofit of wartime houses.”
Osram has developed a small light-emitting diode spotlight that achieves an output of more than 1,000 lumens for the first time. That’s brighter than a 50-watt halogen lamp, thereby making the device suitable for a broad range of general lighting applications. The Ostar Lighting LED, which will be launched on the market this summer, can provide sufficient light for a desk from a height of two meters, for example. Its small size also enables the creation of completely new lamp shapes.
At some point we may actually be desperate enough to try some of the technological solutions to catastrophic global heating recently floated by scientists: artificial volcanoes, parasols in space, and faux trees.
It was only a matter of time, really. General Electric did it a few years ago, Wal-Mart began changing its tune last year, and so far this year at least a dozen more leading companies have also jumped on the bandwagon.
In my last entry I took a page from the Weather Makers, and cited Tim Flannery’s observation that one of the obstacles to decisive action on climate change is that the whole idea of global warming has become a cliché even before it has been understood.
My example of a cliché was the Kyoto protocol, which people talk about without really paying attention to. Kyoto is largely just a symbol of our feelings about global warming, rather than an indication that we’re ...
How does a 30% cut by 2020 sound? How about 80% by 2050?
Zerofootprint founder and CEO Ron Dembo spoke this past week at TED 2007. Here are his two PowerPoint presentations.