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This Supermarket Runs on Rotting Food
UK giant Sainsbury's knows what to do with its leftovers
The UK supermarket chain Sainsbury's is setting an example in sustainability by transforming its own food waste into energy. A store in Cannock, in central England, is now run entirely on electricity generated from its own recycled refuse, marking the first time a major retailer is not reliant on the national grid for its power.
Here's how it works: Any food that can't be donated to local charities for human consumption or turned into animal feed is transported to a nearby anaerobic digestion (AD) plant run by waste management company Biffa. The food waste is converted into Biomethane gas, which is used to power the store.
A 1.5-kilometer cable (that's less than a mile, for you metric-phobes) connects the processing plant to the Sainsbury's, thus very literally closing the loop on food recycling.
This remarkable model may not work everywhere, but it certainly offers grounds for optimism.
As Richard Swannell, a director at Wrap, a government-funded organization that promotes recycling and sustainable business, told the BBC, "There are now 60 AD plants recycling food waste, which can process up to 2.5 million tons of food waste per year and generate enough renewable electricity to power a city three times the size of Cannock."
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This Gadget Makes Gallons of Drinking Water Out of Air
Introduction to Aquaponics: Growing Fish and Vegetables Together
What if I told you that you could catch fish for dinner right in your own backyard? And if you did, what if I told you that right up until you caught those fish, they were growing the veggies for the rest of your dinner? Would you believe me? You should! This is all within reach using a new style of gardening called Aquaponics.
What is Aquaponics?
Aquaponics is, at its most basic level, the marriage of aquaculture (raising fish) and hydroponics (growing plants in water and without soil) together in one integrated system. The fish waste provides organic food for the growing plants and the plants naturally filter the water in which the fish live. The third and fourth critical, yet invisible actors in this symbiotic world are thebeneficial bacteria and composting red worms. Think of them as the Conversion Team. The beneficial bacteria exist on every moist surface of an aquaponic system. They convert the ammonia from the fish waste that is toxic to the fish and useless to the plants, first into nitrites and then into nitrates. The nitrates are relatively harmless to the fish and most importantly, they make terrific plant food. At the same time, the worms convert the solid waste and decaying plant matter in your aquaponic system into vermicompost.
What Types of Fish Can You Use in Aquaponics?
Any type of fresh water fish works well in an aquaponic system. Tilapia is perhaps the most widely grown aquaponics fish, but aquaponic gardeners are also growing catfish, bluegill, trout, and even red-claw crayfish. Not interested in eating your fish? No problem! Koi, goldfish, and any decorative fresh-water fish you would purchase from a pet store work as well. In selecting your fish, however, you do want to pay attention to the temperature at which they both thrive and survive. Tilapia, for example, can survive down to temperatures in the low 60s, but they won’t thrive until they reach the mid 70’s. In contrast, trout will survive up to a maximum temperature of 65, but won’t thrive until their water is in the high 40s to low 50’s.
What Types of Plants Can You Grow in an Aquaponic Garden?
There are also only a few limits to the types of plants you can grow in an aquaponics system. In fact, the only categories of plants that won’t thrive in an aquaponics system are plants like blueberries and azaleas that require an acidic environment to thrive. This is because aquaponic systems stay at a fairly neutral pH and therefore are a poor environment for plants requiring a pH of 4.0 – 5.0.
So can all of this work in any climate? Absolutely…with some protection. A backyard greenhouse is ideal because not only can you create an ideal environment for your fish and plants, but the sunlight is free! As an added bonus, all the water in the fish tank, sump tank and grow beds creates thermal mass in your greenhouse which helps moderate temperature extremes. If you aren’t fortunate enough to have a backyard greenhouse, you can also grow inside. Many aquapons have dedicated their garages and basements to their aquaponics systems!
So can all of this work in any climate? Absolutely…with some protection. A backyard greenhouse is ideal because not only can you create an ideal environment for your fish and plants, but the sunlight is free! As an added bonus, all the water in the fish tank, sump tank and grow beds creates thermal mass in your greenhouse which helps moderate temperature extremes. If you aren’t fortunate enough to have a backyard greenhouse, you can also grow inside. Many aquapons have dedicated their garages and basements to their aquaponics systems!
Benefits of Aquaponic Gardening
Here is the rest of the good news about aquaponics:
- Aquaponic Gardening enables home fish farming. You can now feel good about eating fish again.
- Aquaponic Gardening uses 90% less water than soil-based gardening because the water is re-circulated and only that which the plants take up or evaporates is ever replaced.
- Aquaponic Gardening results in two crops for one input (fish feed).
- Aquaponic Gardening is four to six times as productive on a square foot basis as soil-based gardening. This is because with aquaponic gardening, you can pack plants about twice as densely as you can in soil and the plants grow two to three times as fast as they do in soil.
- Aquaponic systems only require a small amount of energy to run a pump and aeration for the fish. This energy can be provided through renewable methods.
- Aquaponics does not rely on the availability of good soil, so it can be set-up anywhere, including inner city parking lots, abandoned warehouses, schools, restaurants, home basements and garages.
- Aquaponic Gardening is free from weeds, watering and fertilizing concerns, and because it is done at a waist-high level, there is no back strain.
- Aquaponic Gardening is necessarily organic. Natural fish waste provides all the food the plants need. Pesticides would be harmful to the fish so they are never used. Hormones, antibiotics, and other fish additives would be harmful to the plants so they are never used. And the result is every bit as flavorful as soil-based organic produce, with the added benefit of fresh fish for a safe, healthy source of protein.
- Aquaponics is completely scalable. The same basic principles apply to a system based on a 10 gallon aquarium and to a commercial operation.
Aquaponic gardens are straight forward to set up and operate in your own backyard or home as long as you follow some basic guidelines.
Download a FREE Guide to Aquaponics
If you want to learn more, we have just launched a free Creative Commons guide called “The 12 Essentials for Aquaponic Gardening Success” which you can download here. I have also written a book called “Aquaponic Gardening: A Step by Step Guide to Growing Fish and Vegetables Together” as resources. The main point is to set up a system soon and become food independent! There is simply no reason to rely on the fish counter anymore.
This is a guest post by Sylvia Bernstein, Founder and President of TheAquaponicSource.com – Aquaponics Gear and Resources.
Sylvia has been professionally involved in aquaponics and hydroponics since early 2003. She wrote the award-winning and best-selling book, “Aquaponic Gardening: A Step by Step Guide to Growing Fish and Vegetables Together.” She co-founded The Aquaponics Association and co-organized the first annual Aquaponics Association Conference in 2010. The Aquaponics Source also founded and runs the Aquaponic Gardening Community, which is the largest and most active aquaponics forum in North America. Their headquarters in Longmont, CO is the largest (non-farming) aquaponics facility in the Northern Hemisphere (7600 sq ft), and includes a retail store, systems showroom, training center, and a research and development lab. You can follow The Aquaponics Source on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/TheAquaponicSource and Twitter at@aquapon.
All photos courtesy of The Aquaponics Source.
You may also enjoy other posts in our Getting Started Series.
Build Rock Walls – With NO Concrete!
Do you have a bunch of rocks around your property and wish they were doing something more useful than just sitting there? How about the need for a retaining wall or a privacy fence? Well, with just a little patience and a very little money you can put those two things together and make that wall out of those rocks – with no concrete work involved!
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That may sound like crazy talk, but you may not be familiar with a fast growing method of building and landscaping called the gabion. Gabion is an Italian word meaning “big cage” and that’s just what it is – a wire mesh cage, usually filled with rock, but as you can see from the examples below, they can hold so much more.
You can buy pre-fabricated gabions from several companies, but they are simple to make. Please don’t use this article as an instruction for construction – do your research and, now that you know what gabions are, you will find plenty of step-by-step instructions that will walk you through the quick and safe construction of these cool building blocks.
You can build with fat wire cages and stack them on one another, wiring them together as you go. It’s not about just throwing the rocks (or whatever you use to stuff them) in the wire cage. It’s a bit of an art to make sure they are packed tightly and consistently to achieve a “pleasing” visual effect. You can build the gabions taller and of less width, but that will require the gabions to built around a steel post set in concrete. (The steel post hides within the gabions as you stack them.)
The instructions we found most helpful call for either 3 inch by 3 inch or 2 inch by 2 inch steel mesh. This type of mesh comes in large pieces (usually 5 feet by 12 feet) so it’s kind of a hassle to get them to your house if you don’t own a truck. Cut the mesh to size and connect the sides and bottom together with either spirals of wire or you can even use rebar ties – which are cheap. This type of mesh is also known as cattle panel.
Examples of Building With Gabions
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Tesla's Move Into China Could Make It An International Powerhouse
Tesla Motors just delivered its first 12 cars to China as the electric vehicle company gears up to make inroads in the world’s largest car market.
Elon Musk has been on a publicity tour around China over the last few days, and today, Tesla execs are showing off the Model S at the China International Technology Fair. The first 12 cars were sold to economic elites: soccer team owners and business execs. But a mainstream invasion should soon follow.
Tesla's debut in China a big deal for a couple reasons: The country is home the world’s largest car market, with more vehicles sold annually than in the United States and Japan combined. It’s also, like the United States, a huge country with a heavy reliance on fossil fuel. Musk has announced plans to start building out supercharging infrastructure in China, much like he has in the United States. And, most importantly, if everything goes according to plan, Musk plans to begin manufacturing the cars in China rather than just importing them, he told local media earlier this week.
“At some point in the next three or four years we’ll be establishing local manufacturing in China,” he said. “We’re going to make a big investment in China in terms of charging infrastructure.”
A successful push into China could be huge for the company, which is critically acclaimed but still has a long way to go before it starts selling electric cars at anywhere near the volume major manufacturers like Ford, Chevrolet, Honda, and Toyota do.
Telsa recently announced its "Gigafactory," a manufacturing center that will scale up the production of the lithium ion batteries the car uses. That'll help the company achieve its goal of "producing a mass market electric car in approximately three years," but if most of those cars are shipped overseas, it doesn't help push up the company's market share in the US. Now, if Tesla begins manufacturing cars worldwide, it can keep the cars it makes in the United States in the United States and can focus on its Chinese operation as a separate entity.
China, with a booming middle class that can afford the luxury vehicle, seems ready to go nuts over the car. Doug Young, an American living in China who follows the tech industry for Reuters and Forbes, recently told Forbes that the buzz surrounding the company in the country has been impressive.
“I honestly haven’t seen this kind of media frenzy and hype surrounding a product launch for at least a year or two, back when Apple was still at the height of coolness in China,” Young wrote. He suggests that China could “become the company’s biggest global market as soon as next year,” and that the company is poised to sell as many as 5,000 cars by the end of this year.
That’s good news for Musk, who is slowly watching legislators put up legal hurdles for the company to jump over in order to sell his cars in the US. So far, New Jersey and Texas have banned the company’s direct-to-buyer business model, which Musk insists is necessary in order to keep the company financially viable.
Happy to celebrate Earth Day by delivering our first Model S's to China. #HappyEarthDay https://t.co/XdzJPRcmUQ
— Tesla Motors (@TeslaMotors) April 22, 2014
That’s good news for Musk, who is slowly watching legislators put up legal hurdles for the company to jump over in order to sell his cars in the US. So far, New Jersey and Texas have banned the company’s direct-to-buyer business model, which Musk insists is necessary in order to keep the company financially viable.
Overseas, Tesla has sold cars to people in 37 countries and operates stores in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Italy, Germany, France, Denmark, Belgium, Austria, Japan, Australia, and, now, China and Hong Kong. Its first Chinese store is in Beijing.
TOPICS: Tesla, electric cars, China, machines
Car Runs For 100 Years Without Refueling - The Thorium
PILSEN MUSHROOM MAN – FORAGING Tips, Trips and Details for Your Wild Side
Post by GRIT Magazine.
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7 Survival Hacks That Could Save Your Life
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Take two minutes to watch this Informative and useful survival hacks video.
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Charge Any Phone With The Sun – Build A Solar Charger...Learn just how easy it is to build a solar charger for your phone...http://
Future of Small-Scale Wind Power
Dan Juhl, who understands farm life from his own childhood in Woodstock, Minnesota, has been creating profitable business arrangements to encourage small-scale wind power cooperatives.
Photo by Fotolia/RG
Authors William McDonough and Michael Braungart seek a world that is full of clean air, water, soil and power. In their latest ecological manifesto, The Upcycle (North Point Press, 2013), that is precisely the goal they envision. They propose that a better designed world would lead to overall prosperity. In the following excerpt, from “Wind Equals Food,” see how the revamping of wind power can used to produce clean energy, even on a small-scale
Purchase this book from the MOTHER EARTH NEWS store: The Upcycle.
Wind Power: A Renewable Fixing Its Flaws
What makes large-scale hydropower so troublesome is that it does not allow for easy revision. What if the designers and engineers are wrong? How can the structure adapt? If you’ve flooded square miles of wilderness and built a dam 63 stories tall, it’s hard to revise, to amend the system. It is not much different than strip mining or generating nuclear waste in that one has no opportunity to revise. That’s why we believe the best solution is a humble approach combining small solutions that add up to something huge.
Wind power was a renewable that seemed flawed early on but is now fixing its problems step by step. Wind power had the advantage of not massively reconfiguring our terrain at the start and then discovering the downside. That relatively smaller profile allowed wind power to adapt, fix itself, and grow.
Wind power, of course, is nothing new. Windmills have been used for centuries to grind grain on Mykonos, drain the polders of Holland, or pump water from wells into fields in North America. Before rural electrification in the United States, tens of thousands of small electric wind generators dotted the rural landscape. In the 1970s and ’80s, the U.S. government funded the development of large-scale wind turbines, as did other countries such as Denmark, Germany, Spain, India, and, later, China. Now there are many manufacturers of large-scale wind turbines in the market, including big companies like General Electric.
The market for wind blows hot and cold based on local energy pricing, available tax incentives, market production, transportation costs, and so on, but generally, it has been a fast-growing renewable energy sector. Since the 1980s, the cost per kilowatt-hour of wind has dropped 80 percent; it is approximately 2¢ cheaper per kWh than coal-powered electricity on the U.S. market as of June 2012. And that’s without accounting for the cost it saves our system due to decreased carbon dioxide emissions. About 24 percent of Denmark’s energy needs reportedly are met by wind, and the country has plans to grow that to 50 percent by 2020. Serious wind development is happening. It has all the hallmarks of a new industry with ups and downs, but it is clearly here to stay—even with cheap natural gas coming from hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in shale formations.
This Tower Pulls Drinking Water Out of Thin Air
Designer Arturo Vittori says his invention can provide remote villages with more than 25 gallons of clean drinking water per day
Some parts of Ethiopia, finding potable water is a six-hour journey.
People in the region spend 40 billion hours a year trying to find and collect water, says a group called the Water Project. And even when they find it, the water is often not safe, collected from ponds or lakes teeming with infectious bacteria, contaminated with animal waste or other harmful substances.
The water scarcity issue—which affects nearly 1 billion people in Africa alone—has drawn the attention of big-name philanthropists like actor and Water.org co-founder Matt Damon and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who, through their respective nonprofits, have poured millions of dollars into research and solutions, coming up with things like a system that converts toilet water to drinking water and a "Re-invent the Toilet Challenge," among others.
Critics, however, have their doubts about integrating such complex technologies in remote villages that don't even have access to a local repairman. Costs and maintenance could render many of these ideas impractical.
"If the many failed development projects of the past 60 years have taught us anything," wrote one critic, Toilets for People founder Jason Kasshe, in a New York Times editorial, "it's that complicated, imported solutions do not work."
Other low-tech inventions, like this life straw, aren't as complicated, but still rely on users to find a water source.
It was this dilemma—supplying drinking water in a way that's both practical and convenient—that served as the impetus for a new product called Warka Water, an inexpensive, easily-assembled structure that extracts gallons of fresh water from the air.
The invention from Arturo Vittori, an industrial designer, and his colleague Andreas Vogler doesn't involve complicated gadgetry or feats of engineering, but instead relies on basic elements like shape and material and the ways in which they work together.
At first glance, the 30-foot-tall, vase-shaped towers, named after a fig tree native to Ethiopia, have the look and feel of a showy art installation. But every detail, from carefully-placed curves to unique materials, has a functional purpose.
The rigid outer housing of each tower is comprised of lightweight and elastic juncus stalks, woven in a pattern that offers stability in the face of strong wind gusts while still allowing air to flow through. A mesh net made of nylon or polypropylene, which calls to mind a large Chinese lantern, hangs inside, collecting droplets of dew that form along the surface. As cold air condenses, the droplets roll down into a container at the bottom of the tower. The water in the container then passes through a tube that functions as a faucet, carrying the water to those waiting on the ground.
Using mesh to facilitate clean drinking water isn't an entirely new concept. A few years back, an MIT student designed a fog-harvesting device with the material. But Vittori's invention yields more water, at a lower cost, than some other concepts that came before it.
"[In Ethiopia], public infrastructures do not exist and building [something like] a well is not easy," Vittori says of the country. "To find water, you need to drill in the ground very deep, often as much as 1,600 feet. So it's technically difficult and expensive. Moreover, pumps need electricity to run as well as access to spare parts in case the pump breaks down."
So how would Warka Water's low-tech design hold up in remote sub-Saharan villages? Internal field tests have shown that one Warka Water tower can supply more than 25 gallons of water throughout the course of a day, Vittori claims. He says because the most important factor in collecting condensation is the difference in temperature between nightfall and daybreak, the towers are proving successful even in the desert, where temperatures, in that time, can differ as much as 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
The structures, made from biodegradable materials, are easy to clean and can be erected without mechanical tools in less than a week. Plus, he says, "once locals have the necessary know-how, they will be able to teach other villages and communities to build the Warka."
In all, it costs about $500 to set up a tower—less than a quarter of the cost of something like the Gates toilet, which costs about $2,200 to install and more to maintain. If the tower is mass produced, the price would be even lower, Vittori says. His team hopes to install two Warka Towers in Ethiopia by next year and is currently searching for investors who may be interested in scaling the water harvesting technology across the region.
"It's not just illnesses that we're trying to address. Many Ethiopian children from rural villages spend several hours every day to fetch water, time they could invest for more productive activities and education," he says. "If we can give people something that lets them be more independent, they can free themselves from this cycle."
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