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Colin Bennett

Electric Bus Charges Wirelessly?! | EcoGeek - 0 views

  • oyota's heavy duty division, Hino, is testing a new kind of plug-in hybrd...one without a plug. The batteries on the hybrid assist and even sometimes take over for the diesel engine. But the energy in the batteries doesn't come from a plug, it comes from a wireless charging system built into the road.
Colin Bennett

China's Rate of Inflation Is Highest in 11 Years - New York Times - 0 views

  • HONG KONG — Consumer prices in China surged to a 8.7 percent annual rate in February from a 7.1 percent rate in January, the fastest pace of increase in more than 11 years, China’s National Bureau of Statistics announced on Tuesday morning.
  • China announced separately on Monday that producer prices were up 6.6 percent in February from a year earlier, compared with 6.1 percent in January.
Colin Bennett

Ericsson exec sees WiFi hotspots becoming the new telephone booths - Engadget - 0 views

  • While it hardly comes as much of a surprise, Ericsson Chief Marketing Officer Johan Bergendahl is now predicting nothing short of the demise of WiFi hotspots, and he's saying that they'll be replaced by -- you guessed it -- mobile broadband.
Colin Bennett

Mixed reality research takes a first hesitant step - Engadget - 0 views

  • Considering how much impact our gadgets already have on our day-to-day lives, we not sure we don't already live in a mixed reality environment,
Colin Bennett

EERE News: Renewable Energy Continues Rapid Global Growth in 2007 - 0 views

  • The global use of renewable energy sources continued its rapid growth in 2007, with 40 gigawatts of new renewable energy capacity added throughout the world, according to a new report.
Colin Bennett

China upgrades environmental administration to ministry_English_Xinhua - 0 views

  •   BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China is to elevate the status of the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) to a ministry, among the major 27 ministries and commissions of the Cabinet, said Hua Jianmin, State Council secretary-general, on Tuesday.
Sergio Ferreira

Abu Dhabi's solar venture - 0 views

  • . Masdar, the oil-rich emirate’s $15 billion renewable energy venture, and Spanish technology company Sener on Wednesday announced a joint venture called Torresol Energy to build large-scale solar power plants in Australia, Europe, the Middle East, North Africa and the United States.
  • The irony is too rich to leave unsaid: A leading oil producer invests billions in carbon-free energy while a leading consumer of fossil fuels - the United States - continues to subsidize Big Oil while while offering only tepid support for green technology
  • Torresol plans to build solar power plants using a technology it calls a Central Tower Receiver system. It’s similar to technology used by competitors like BrightSource in that fields of mirrors called heliostats focus the sun’s rays on tower that contains a receiver. In this case the receiver is filled with salt which when heated vaporizes water to create steam that drives an electricity-generating turbine. The company says it intends to have 500 megawatts of solar electricity online by 2012.
Hans De Keulenaer

Carbon nanotubes outperform copper nanowires as interconnects - 0 views

  • After crunching numbers for months with the help of Rensselaer’s Computational Center for Nanotechnology Innovations, the most powerful university-based supercomputer in the world, the research team concluded that the carbon nanotube bundles boasted a much smaller electrical resistance than the copper nanowires. This lower resistance suggests carbon nanotube bundles would therefore be better suited for interconnect applications.
Colin Bennett

UK gives homeowners green light for solar power | Environment | Reuters - 0 views

  • From April 6, all homeowners in Britain will be free to install microgeneration equipment like solar panels without getting planning permission for them, as the government tries to cut climate warming gases emitted from coal and gas fired power plants in order to supply electricity.
Colin Bennett

Cuba ends ban on DVD player, computer sales - Engadget - 0 views

  • the Cuban government is finally allowing general consumers to buy various electronics, including DVD players and computers, for the first time. Only companies and foreigners were previously able to buy computers, while the looming threat of terrible Hollywood movies had forced Cuban authorities to seize DVD players at the airport. The change is due to "the improved availability of electricity," and Cubans can look forward to also picking up microwaves, 24-inch televisions, and rice cookers to plug into the new juice. Of course, it's not all flip flops and high-fives: air conditioners will not be available until next year, and the deadly menace known as the toaster will be restricted until 2010.
Sergio Ferreira

Slicing Up Silicon for Cheaper Solar - 0 views

  • It has recently started shipping its first panels to select customers. This spring the company will begin production of solar panels at a factory built to produce 25 megawatts of solar panels per year.
  • This approach saves money because the total costs of the molded plastic, other extra materials, and added manufacturing steps still are lower than the cost of the additional silicon used in conventional solar panels. Solaria also reduces costs by using manufacturing equipment already developed for the semiconductor industry, thus avoiding expensive customized equipment.
Glycon Garcia

GE Demonstrates World's First ''Roll-to-Roll'' Manufactured Organic Light Emitting Diod... - 0 views

  • NISKAYUNA, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--GE Global Research, the centralized research organization of General Electric (NYSE: GE), and GE Consumer & Industrial, today announced the successful demonstration of the world’s first roll-to-roll manufactured organic light-emitting diode (OLED) lighting devices. This demonstration is a key step toward making OLEDs and other high performance organic electronics products at dramatically lower costs than what is possible today.
Colin Bennett

What's next in driving green building | Cleantech.com - 0 views

  • A new trinational report gives green building a green light, but who should drive? The industry weighs in.
Colin Bennett

Intelligent side-impact protection for cars | Emerging Technology Trends | ZDNet.com - 0 views

  • You can see above one of the APROSYS sensing systems. It can detect and track objects impacting the side of a car by using two radar sensors and a stereo video camera.
Colin Bennett

Whirlpool's green kitchen concept fuels other devices - Engadget - 0 views

  • Whirlpool is next in line to show off a concept that could purportedly hack down your energy bill
  •  
    It is sensible that with more integrated use of appliance/energy in homes that safety is a high priority.
Colin Bennett

Searching for Green Electronics | Greenpeace International - 0 views

  • This race for greener electronics has seen dizzying changes sweep across the industry.
Glycon Garcia

RGGI Carbon Auction Moves Ahead - 0 views

  • tates participating in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), an agreement among the Governors of ten Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states to reduce greenhouse gases from power plants, have announced that the first ever CO2 allowance auction in the United States for a mandatory emissions reduction program will take place on September 10, 2008.
Glycon Garcia

Energias Alternativas e Renováveis: São Paulo quer energia solar obrigatória ... - 0 views

  • São Paulo - Daqui a poucos meses, projetos de edificações que entrarem para aprovação na prefeitura de São Paulo terão de obedecer a lei 14.459/07, que obriga o uso de aquecimento solar.
    • Glycon Garcia
       
      In few months the new buildings in Sao Paulo should use water solar heating according to the law 14.459/07.
Glycon Garcia

New Energy Sources on Horizon | Newsweek Project Green | Newsweek.com - 0 views

shared by Glycon Garcia on 18 Mar 08 - Cached
  • Chances are you've heard of hybrids and biofuels, but what about oil-producing yeast and turbinelike buoys that transform ocean waves into electricity? Those are just a couple of the alternative-energy sources that may power the future according to Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund and coauthor, with Miriam Horn, of the new book "Earth: The Sequel"
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