Posts Tagged ‘engineers’
Thursday, September 17th, 2009
Rinspeed’s Zero Emission sQuba
Go ahead and day dream, it’s supposedly good for you and you can have what ever you want without costing a dime. Need a subject? Well picture this; the futuristic 2 door sportster “sQuba” is a James Bond inspired, zero-emissions, electric aqua-car from CEO Frank M. Rinderknecht and the geniuses at Swiss Rinspeed Design Company. The sQuba “moves like a fish in water” to depths of up to 33 feet (10 meters) and still manages to reach speeds of around 75mph (120kmh) when on dry land. In the 1977 James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me, 007 dove below the waves in a futuristic vehicle that moments before seemed to be an ‘ordinary’ car. Well, that really didn’t happen – it was movie magic. Not only is this vehicle real, it’s better because it’s green. The zero-emissions sQuba can transport a driver and passenger in its open cockpit design which is intended to allow the occupants easy escape, in case of emergency. When underwater, the occupants breathe air carried in the vehicle through scuba-style rebreathers and without occupants the sQuba will surface automatically. (more…)
Tags: animals, antibiotics, consumers, cows, digestion, engineers, environment, ethics, fda, go, goats, guinea pig, human health, ideas, motion rules, october 31, petition, pigs, proposal, spider silk
Posted in Going Green, Technology, go green | 20 Comments »
Monday, December 29th, 2008
Seventy-six percent (76%) of all electricity generated by US power plants goes to
supply the Building Sector. Buildings are responsible for almost half (48%) of all
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions annually.
With this in mind, Architecture 2030, a non-profit independent organization, was
established by architect Edward Mazria in 2002. 2030’s mission is to rapidly
transform the US and global Building Sector from the major contributor of GHG to a
central part of the solution to the global-warming crisis. (more…)
Tags: 2030 challenge, accomplishment, architecture 2030, california public utilities, carbonates, carbons, climate, commission, company, doe, edward mazria, electric, electrical, electricity, electrics, emissions, energy, energy consumption, engineers, fossil, fossil fuel, fuel, fuel reduction, gas, generators, global architecture, greenhouse gas, heating refrigerating, independent organization, national labs, new buildings, performance standard, plants, power, power plants, private sector companies, proposal, public utilities commission, refrigerator, renovation, renovations, retrofits, saving, savings, seventy six, target, utility
Posted in Going Green | 6 Comments »
Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008
Smart Water
A standalone desalinator needs 17 gallons of diesel fuel and 66.5 kilowatts of
electricity to make 1,000 gallons of freshwater, but now, the Solar Cube, (made
by Spectra Watermakers in California), churns out 1,500 gallons of drinking water
on just 22 kilowatts of its own solar and wind power. The innovation is a pump
that triples efficiency by recapturing hydraulic pressure during the filtering
process. Solar Cubes are now bringing freshwater to remote regions and places
short on infrastructure and electricity without paying the CO2 price – way cool. (more…)
Tags: asphalt, batteries, battery design, car, cars, chevy volt, company, copper, copper pipes, desalinator, electric, electric car, electric vehicle, electrical, electricity, electrics, energy, engineers, fuel, har, heat conductor, hydraulic pressure, infrastructure, innovations, kilowatt, kilowatts, liquid cooling system, lithium ion batteries, metals, photovoltaic, photovoltaics, pipe, pipes, plants, plug n play, power, rajib, roadster, rooftops, saving, savings, science, smart water, solar radiation, steam, stocks, system pumps, systems, turbines, university, university of massachusetts dartmouth, volts, water, wind, worcester massachusetts, worcester polytechnic institute, zero emissions
Posted in Green Living | 3 Comments »
Saturday, December 6th, 2008
Energy efficiency boom leads 9 clean technology predictions for 2009
SHANGHAI, China, December 4th, 2008 – Continuing an annual tradition, the Cleantech
Group™, founders of the cleantech investment category and providers of leading global
market research and financial services for the cleantech ecosystem, today issued nine
predictions for clean technology markets in 2009, forecasting progress in some sectors,
but delays and setbacks in others.
A reflection of undercurrents in the global clean technology category from the company’s
conversations with industry and government leadership worldwide, the nine predictions
include a global focus on energy efficiency as a job creation and economic engine, and an
increase in valuations of global wind companies. (more…)
Tags: assets, barcelona, batteries, carbon reduction, carbonates, carbons, china, clean technology, climate, company, competiveness, complexities, conversion, corporations, currents, doe, economics, emergencies, energy, energy efficiency, engineers, ethanol, failure rate, financial, forum event, generators, global climate change, global focus, global market research, global wind, go, government leadership, green, greens, india, infrastructure, insight, insightful, investment category, lead, leadership, marketers, nicholas parker, obama, photovoltaic, photovoltaics, renewables, service, shanghai china, stocks, systems, technology investors, technology predictions, time challenges, time peak, trade legislation, tradition, trillion, water, wind, wind companies, world
Posted in Going Green | 5 Comments »
Monday, December 1st, 2008
I found this at EcoGeek and found it to be another interesting idea.

FloDesign, a Massachusetts based engineering firm, has designed a new wind turbine
that deviates from the standard windmill in a compelling way. Its main feature is a
stationary piece in front that directs wind into the spinning blades. Overall, the
machine looks more like a jet engine than a wind turbine and it packs quite a punch
as well – a FloDesign turbine can generate as much power as a conventional turbine (more…)
Tags: 18 wheeler, deviates, doe, ecogeek, energy, engineering firm, engineers, flatbeds, generators, gw, ideas, jet engine, light and shadow, lights, money, new wind, nuts, oscillation, participants, power, prototypes, punch, s, stationary structures, turbine blades, turbines, utility, wind, wind farm, wind turbine, windmill
Posted in Going Green | 10 Comments »
Friday, November 28th, 2008
Rapidly accelerating climate change (global warming), which is caused by greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions, is now fueling dangerous regional and global environmental events.
Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration illustrates that buildings are
responsible for almost half (48%) of all GHG emissions annually. Seventy-six percent
(76%) of all electricity generated by US power plants goes to supply the Building
Sector. Therefore, immediate action in the Building Sector is essential if we are to
avoid hazardous climate change. Credible scientists give us 10 years to be well on our
way toward global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions in order to avoid (more…)
Tags: 2030 challenge, accomplishment, architecture 2030, catastrophic climate change, climate, company, credibility, doe, edward mazria, electric, electrical, electricity, electrics, emissions, energy, energy consumption, energy information administration, engineers, fossil, fossil fuel, fuel, fuel reduction, gas, generators, ghg emissions, global architecture, global greenhouse, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, independent organization, new buildings, performance standard, plants, power, power plants, proposal, refrigerator, renovation, renovations, saving, savings, seventy six, target, u s energy, utility
Posted in Going Green | 4 Comments »
Thursday, November 20th, 2008
For you futurists, geeks and of course, you greenies……… look at this!
Supercomputers Break Petaflop Barrier, Transforming Science By Betsy Mason
A new crop of supercomputers is breaking down the petaflop speed barrier, pushing
high-performance computing into a new realm that could change science more profoundl
than at any time since Galileo, leading researchers say.
When the Top 500 list of the world’s fastest supercomputers was announced at the
international supercomputing conference in Austin, Texas, on Monday, IBM had barely
managed to cling to the top spot, fending off a challenge from Cray. But both competitors
broke petaflop speeds, performing 1.105 and 1.059 quadrillion floating-point calculations (more…)
Tags: accurate models, climate, climate models, competitor, complexities, computer scientist, crops, design experiments, efficient energy, energy, energy transmission, engineers, fastest supercomputers, generators, international supercomputing conference, inventing, invention, laboratory, lawrencemark seager, lead, livermore national laboratory, massive number, natural, nature, new physics, number, number crunchers, point calculations, quadrillion, qualitative changes, science, scramjet engines, speed barrier, transforming science, transition, wire, world
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