Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 14

Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 14
 A T L A N T I C A 13 Hi and Lo Eco-loving feats of technology from around the world. Compiled by Sara Blask. It’s Your turn It may not be the sexiest phrase – offsetting carbon emissions – but if Arnold Schwarzenegger, Al Gore, and Pearl Jam are willing to pony up the cash to neutralize their eco-footprint, then so can you (see p. 26 for more). Take their lead and start offsetting your own carbon dioxide emissions with Native Energy, a privately-owned Native American energy company based in Vermont that invests in renewable energy. Use their CO2 calculators to figure out how much of that nasty, global warming-causing carbon you’re creating (you can offset everything from your wedding to your dorm room to your cross-country road trip), and once that’s calculated, choose which projects you want to help build – either wind farms, farm methane energy, or a blend of the two – and offset your emissions for as little as USD 3 per month. In return you’ll get a windy thank you note from our earth. nativeenergy.com tHe Greenest and HIppest of aLL With its open spaces, floor-to-ceiling windows, and glass atrium with hydroponic vegetable garden, the new Halley VI research station that will open on Antarctica’s Brunt Ice Shelf in 2009 could resemble the design wishes of a hipster’s dream loft. Incorporate those architecture elements into eight pre- fabricated and linkable modules, add adjustable steel skis to the bottom of each unit, and you have the blueprint for the new USD 74 million, fully re-locatable research station that will serve as the new home of the British Antarctic Survey. British scientists have assessed that a major calving event sometime after 2010 could leave the existing research station, Halley V, stranded on an iceberg. To cope with future calving events, its successor has been designed so that it can be towed across the ice on giant skis, last longer, and have less of an environmental impact than the previous bases. Because increased manpower equates increased energy consumption, the designers reduced the number of people required during peak season from 78 to 52. Water consumption will be reduced by up to 50 percent with the help of low flow showers, washing machines and toilets – and that’s only the beginning. antarctica.ac.uk WIne, tHe neW tHread What smells like red wine and feels like sludge when wet? That’s easy, a new bacterial fermented dress made from wine that… grows itself. These dresses won’t be appearing in your local clothing boutique anytime soon, but a team of artists and scientists at the University of Western Australia are currently figuring out how to turn biological specimens into art pieces – and potentially creating a new textile in the process. Essentially what happens is that living microbes in the wine are converted into a scummy layer of cellulose, which is the same material that forms the cell walls of green plants. The cellulose layers are then laid over one another to create the organic fabric. The only problem now is that when the cellulose layers dry, they turn into a delicate, tissue paper-like material. The goal is to partner up with an organic chemist soon to figure out a way to strengthen the fibers and produce longer, more stable ones so you don’t have to walk around all day in a wet skirt. Their other project? Producing a translucent material using beer. Stay tuned. bioalloy.org/projects/micro-be.html
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