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Hans De Keulenaer

Microbes in Dirt Provide Electricity for African Villagers : TreeHugger - 0 views

  • Providing electricity to people in countries where either the grid is not reliable, or nonexistent and unlikely ever to be built, can make a huge difference in people’s quality of life in very practical ways. We’ve written before about companies such as D.Light Design which have solar-powered replacements for kerosene lanterns , and efforts to bring small-scale solar panels to off-grid villages in Laos. Hand cranked cell phone chargers, radios and flashlights are other proven options that have received attention.
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    I'm ambivalent to this idea. It's better than nothing, but very far from grid-based electricity. Do these ideas block Africa's development. Are they patronising?
Ihering Alcoforado

Issues in New Frontiers (ActionBioscience) - 0 views

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    global threats NEW! Investigating Food-Borne Illness an interview with Robert Tauxe Airborne Disease Control by Wladyslaw Jan Kowalski The Spread of Dengue Fever an interview with Duane J. Gubler The Evolution of Emerging Viruses an interview with Eddie Holmes Biomedical and Biodefense Uses for Ricin an interview with Ellen Vitetta Emerging and Reemerging Infectious Diseases: A Global Problem an interview with Stephen S. Morse Plant Genebanks: Food Security by Geoffrey C. Hawtin and Jeremy Cherfas Agricultural Bioterrorism by Radford G. Davis Microbes: What They Do & How Antibiotics Change Them by Maura Meade-Callahan
fishead ...*∞º˙

Glycerin Goes from Soapy Bauble to Biofuel Hero : CleanTechnica - 2 views

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    "GlycosBio has commercialized glycerin-eating microbes developed by Rice University.Like some 21st-century version of The Blob, a thick, gooey tide of glycerin is overwhelming world markets."
Hans De Keulenaer

FOXNews.com - Bacteria Used to Generate Hydrogen From Garbage - Science News | Science ... - 1 views

  • All kinds of biodegradable garbage — from sewage to leftover food — could yield valuable hydrogen fuel, an alternative to fossil fuels, with the aid of microbes cultivated in special reactors.
Colin Bennett

Hydrogen brewing gets an electrical boost - earth - 12 November 2007 - New Scientist En... - 0 views

  • A new microbe-powered device can extract up to 99% of the available hydrogen from biological compounds that have stumped previous attempts to ferment fuel from plant waste. The secret is to give the bugs a helping hand with a kick of electric charge.
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