Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Jericho: The PETA Prize

You've heard of the X-Prize. Well, the fine people at PETA now have their own prize. If PETA's plan succeeds, the future will arrive in the summer of 2012.

What are we talking about? Lab grown meat.

"What's the big deal?" you say. "We've had tofurkey for years!" you say. We're not talking about a meat substitute. We're talking about real meat or nearly real meat - but meat that never left the factory or was ever next to a bone. No animal had to suffer the trials of factory farming or had to die so you could enjoy a tender, juicy steak. This is guilt-free meat - and there might be other benefits.

I first came across this idea while reading Ray Kurzweil's The Singularity is Near. The idea is that if you can grow meat in the lab, you don't have to kill an animal and you use the materials in question more efficiently. It takes about five pounds of grain to get one pound of beef. Imagine if you could get a pound of beef for just two pounds of grain or even one to one. The rest of that grain could be used to feed people - lowering the over all price of grain. Not to mention changing the carbon footprint required to raise cattle.

Plus, there could be other benefits. What if the fat in your steak was GOOD for you? Well, if you are building meat in a lab, it shouldn't be too difficult to make the bad fats into good fats. I'm sure many of you have heard that meat fat is bad for you. You've probably also heard that Omega 3 fats are necessary for good health. Well, with a few changes, the Omega 6 fatty acids found in meat could be changed to Omega 3 fatty acids in lab grown meat. Then, your steak would not only be something that didn't kill an animal, but it would also be "health food". They could also enrich the steak with vitamins and minerals and other healthy ingredients. Imagine if you felt good about feeding your kid a McDonald's cheese burger?

I haven't agreed with many of PETA's methods and ideas across the years. But, encouraging this kind of research in this way is exactly where organizations like PETA should go in my opinion. Instead of throwing red paint on fur coats, encourage industry to find ways to not need to use animal based products. It benefits everyone - including the yummy cows!

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Thursday, January 24, 2008

Max: Go Fly A Kite

Gone with the wind on 'kite ship'

In recent months, commercial shipping has been criticised for not doing enough to tackle global warming. Of all the CO2 being pumped into the atmosphere today, 4% comes from ships. That's more than the aviation industry, primarily because 90% of global trade is done by sea.

MS Beluga SkySails believes it has a solution. It has set sail on a mission to turn the oceans green.

Once the ship has reached the open sea, it reveals its brand new weapon in the fight against global warming: a kite.

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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Max: New Solar Tech

Via Popular Science

Imagine a solar panel without the panel. Just a coating, thin as a layer of paint, that takes light and converts it to electricity. From there, you can picture roof shingles with solar cells built inside and window coatings that seem to suck power from the air. Consider solar-powered buildings stretching not just across sunny Southern California, but through China and India and Kenya as well, because even in those countries, going solar will be cheaper than burning coal. That’s the promise of thin-film solar cells: solar power that’s ubiquitous because it’s cheap. The basic technology has been around for decades, but this year, Silicon Valley–based Nanosolar created the manufacturing technology that could make that promise a reality.

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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Max: Shawn Frayne - Fucking Genius

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Jericho: Wheat Be Gone

Because being poor just isn't bad enough, now the excesses of the richer countries on the planet are going to make it just that much tougher to live in a poorer country. Global Warming is striking again.

What am I talking about? Read this.

How much longer do we have to wait for viable biofuels?

Okay, I know the answer to that question. No answers are going to come over night. It's just infuriating. I can't believe how much we are fucking up this planet - all due to our own carelessness and lack of fore thought.

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Sunday, July 22, 2007

Jericho: Greenbox

Who knew fishing could be good for the environment?

Three fishing buddies in Wales may have hit the environmental jackpot and we're all going to benefit. Check out the article here.

This is the kinda thing that excites the hell out of me. Even if you just gave this to trucks and buses and trains, it would have to take a bite out of our carbon footprint!

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Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Max: A Bit Of The Future

The Vertical Farm Project

The concept of indoor farming is not new, since hothouse production of tomatoes, a wide variety of herbs, and other produce has been in vogue for some time. What is new is the urgent need to scale up this technology to accommodate another 3 billion people. An entirely new approach to indoor farming must be invented, employing cutting edge technologies. The Vertical Farm must be efficient (cheap to construct and safe to operate). Vertical farms, many stories high, will be situated in the heart of the world's urban centers. If successfully implemented, they offer the promise of urban renewal, sustainable production of a safe and varied food supply (year-round crop production), and the eventual repair of ecosystems that have been sacrificed for horizontal farming.

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Jericho: Get over it, Tree-Huggers!

We have talked several times on this site about alt-fuels and the advantages of Plug-In Hybrids, Hydrogen and Ethanol powered vehicles. I think I can speak for Max when I say we support advancements in alt-fuel usage. Oil is an addiction this country has to give up.

Finally, we see a step in the right direction.

Okay, maybe not the Plug-In/Hydrogen vehicle, let's try for plug-in, flex fuel hybrid first, umm-kay? But, I think you see where I'm going. Seeing Bush with an extension cord in his hand makes me feel good all over.

But, the idiot environmentalists have got to step in and make a fuss!

"Making our cars and light trucks go farther on a gallon of gas is the single biggest step we can take toward saving American families money at the pump, ending our dangerous addiction to oil, and curbing global warming," said Dan Becker, the Sierra Club's director of the global warming and energy program.

Okay, first, Dan, put down the pipe. Obviously, you are not in this conversation. Allow me to catch you up. E85 will do exactly what you are describing. The "E" stands for ethanol. The "85" is for the percentage, by volume, of ethanol in a gallon (or liter for that matter) of fuel. If we are using 85% less gasoline, isn't that cutting our gasoline usage by 85%? To get gains like that, you would have to nearly double the MPG of the average vehicle. This would mean a Ford Explorer that got 30 city and 42 highway MPG. It would be great if it existed, but the only way to do it would be to make the vehicle out of paper! And if you think the American public is giving up their SUVs - where have you been the last two decades?

E85 will do more than save money for families in this country, it will make money for families in this country and aid the environment in the process. American farmers will be called upon to grow feed stocks to make the ethanol in question. Material that is currently headed for landfills will be used as fuel. And, in the end, carbon held in the earth will remain there and carbon in the atmosphere will be reduced - or at least not increased. By all accounts, North America will take up alt-fuels, but oil will drop in price and fuel the developing economies in China and India, unless they, too, get sold on alt-fuels. It would be nice if large and influential groups, like, say, the Sierra Club, helped these countries see the light.

Dan, saying "Let's have more MPGs" is one thing. Telling us how to get there is another thing. E85 is compatable with our current infrastructure in every way. It reduces our usage of oil by, you guessed it, 85%. It adds jobs to this country. It will lower the price of domestically produced oil and thus lower the price of fuel in general. As E85 takes hold, it will become cheaper to produce and further cost savings at the pump, in the taxi, at the grocery store, etc. Dan, do you have a plan that does the same? We'd love to hear it.

In closing, Dan, I must say this to you: SHUT UP! Use your pulpit to support something worthwhile. Don't be a stumbling block in the process. We all want lower MPG, but this is a huge step in the right direction. Let's get this off the ground, this is something that can be done TODAY, then we can work on that 40 MPG Explorer.

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Friday, March 23, 2007

Max: Poo Poo Paper

Friday, March 16, 2007

Max: My Hero

His energy bill is $0.00

Mike Strizki lives in the nation's first solar-hydrogen house. The technology this civil engineer has been able to string together – solar panels, a hydrogen fuel cell, storage tanks, and a piece of equipment called an electrolyzer – provides electricity to his home year-round, even on the cloudiest of winter days.

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Thursday, March 08, 2007

Jericho: Into the Woolsey

Check out this article.

I saw a speech from this guy maybe six months ago - sounds like the same speech they are talking about in this article. He was giving it to a group of farmers here in the area - I caught it on the UW's section of On Demand shows from Comcast.

This guy really seems to know his junk. He's not big on hydrogen because it isn't compatible with the current infrastructure. He likes bio-fuels like bio-diesel and ethanol. Primarily he likes these because not much has to change to use them, hydrogen will take a major shift in the infrastructure. Bio-fuels are here now and can be used by more and more new vehicles - bio-diesel can be used on ANY diesel engine without modification.

The terrorism stuff really struck home with me. The above article doesn't drive home the point very well. Apparently this plant in Saudi extracts sulphur from crude. Without that extraction, the crude is useless. There is a total of ONE plant in Saudi, in the entire region, that does this. Take it out and all of us are walking to work, because it will be less expensive to stay home. In the speech I heard, he said from $100 a barrel ... to $300 a barrel!!! Put THAT in your SUV!

For those in Missouri, he was really big on a pair of plants in Missouri that are converting "turkey awful" into bio-fuels. Apparently, one plant processes turkeys. They take the straw, poop and left over bird bits, send it all to the plant up the street and this is turned into a fuel. It's been a while since I've seen this - but I'm pretty sure that's how it went. In my book, garbage to fuel, no matter what the garbage, is a good thing!

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Friday, February 09, 2007

Max: 'Doomsday' vault design unveiled

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | 'Doomsday' vault design unveiled

The final design for a 'doomsday' vault that will house seeds from all known varieties of food crops has been unveiled by the Norwegian government.

The Svalbard International Seed Vault will be built into a mountainside on a remote island near the North Pole.

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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Max: Trash 2 Electricity

Scientists develop portable generator that turns trash into electricity

A group of scientists have created a portable refinery that efficiently converts food, paper and plastic trash into electricity. The machine, designed for the U.S. military, would allow soldiers in the field to convert waste into power and could have widespread civilian applications in the future.

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