Skip to main content

Home/ Green Technology/ Group items tagged economy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Mark Kabbbash

INTK Stock Profile at Stock Guru. INTK Steady Doubling of Sales While Economy Suffers :... - 0 views

  •  
    Steady Doubling of Sales While Economy Suffers We have seen steady growth in INTK. In mid June INTK announced sales in June of 2009 were $100,552.85, more than double the revenues of June of 2008, a year when annual revenues were $1,424,036.00 US. Industrial Nanotech, Inc. intends to meet or exceed their uninterrupted five year track record of approximately doubling revenues every year. I want to put this in perspective. The economy is terrible. Sacred cow companies are losing ground. Utilities have always been super steady but they are having trouble --- and yet ---- INTK keeps on doubling sales year over year.
Verny Gregory

How Refurbished Electronics Can Drive Economic Growth in Egypt - 0 views

  •  
    Egypt's economy was mainly depended on the tourism and exports of cotton, oil and gas. However, in recent times due to decline in oil prices, refurbished consumer electronics industry has emerged as a saviour to the economy. Read on, what is Egypt's advantage on the import of bulk refurbished electronics, and how these electronics can provide new channels to organisations looking to improve their IT asset management strategy, investments and the bottomline.
Alex Parker

Online fraud and cybercrime costs UK economy nearly £11 billion a year - 1 views

  •  
    Add to favorites According to data from Action Fraud, the UK economy potentially lost a staggering £10.9 billion to fraud and cybercrime in 2015/16. This equates to approximately £210 per person over the age of 16 living in the UK.
Maluvia Haseltine

A Quest for Batteries to Alter the Energy Equation - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    Racing against other companies around the globe, International Battery isn the front lines of an effort to build smaller, lighter, more powerful batteries that could help transform the American energy economy by replacing gasoline in cars and making windmills and solar cells easier to integrate into the power grid.
Maluvia Haseltine

Tumbleweed Tiny House Company - 0 views

  •  
    Amazing tiny house designs! These mobile homes are designes with a focus on efficiency, economy, and aesthetics. Apparently no building permits are required for them, which solves a LOT of problems!
yannick_ddtm

Développement durable. Gunter Pauli et l'économie circulaire au chevet de la ... - 0 views

  • Gunter Pauli a des idées extraordinaires, mais simples. Il croise et réunit des problématiques qui n'ont rien à voir ensemble. En pensant autrement, il fait naître quelque chose d'innovant
Adam Mills

California schools to say goodbye to textbooks - 0 views

  •  
    As we all know, California is in the midst of a debilitating budget crisis that is not going away any time soon. The state government has to make cuts in education budgets, but are textbooks a great way to save money? Come chime in.
Skeptical Debunker

Bloom Energy Promises Cheap, Emissions-Free Power From a Small Box | Popular Science - 0 views

  • The Bloom Box idea came from K.R. Sridhar, a former NASA rocket scientist who once built a similar box device to generate oxygen on Mars for future colonists. Sridhar simply turned the concept on its head by pumping oxygen into the box, along with fuel. The oxygen and fuel combine within a new type of fuel cell to create the chemical reaction that makes electricity. There's also no need for power lines coming in from an outside source, and Sridhar envisions the box eventually providing energy wirelessly to homes and businesses. That could do away with traditional power plants and the power grid. Such transformative power may only come about if the Bloom Box fuel cells can work reliably and efficiently -- other fuel cell technologies have proven notoriously finicky. Sridhar makes his fuel cells based on cheap sand-based ceramics, coated with special green and black "inks" that allow for the chemical reaction which makes electricity. One of the simple disks can power a light bulb, and a stack of 64 disks with cheap metal plates in between them can supposedly power a Starbucks. And unlike fuel cells that require pure hydrogen, the Bloom Box can use fuels ranging from natural gas to bio-gas.
  •  
    A boxy power plant that could one day produce efficient, inexpensive, clean energy in every home might sound like a pipe dream, but it's the very real product of a Silicon Valley startup called Bloom Energy. Twenty large corporations that include Google, FedEx, Walmart and eBay have already purchased and begun testing the Bloom Boxes. 60 Minutes recently got a sneak peek at this possibly game-changing energy device.
  •  
    Here's SOME of the "rubs". How long will the device's last and what are the maintenance costs (if any)? What will the cost of the fuel be and how much is used? Will the manufacturing process "scale up nicely" (and easily) so that "economies of scale" will actually bring the price of a home-system down to around $3-5K? Will the price of the system, its maintenance, and fuel actually come out to be significantly less than the price of "grid delivered" electricity? Without "good enough" answers to such questions, this system may be more of a good remote generation facility than a grid replacement.
1 - 14 of 14
Showing 20 items per page