MIT’s new liquid flow batteries — from trendbird.biz
MIT’s new liquid flow batteries could make refueling EVs as fast as pumping gas
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- Enerkem raises $60M to transform garbage into fuel — from trendbird.biz
Canadian company Enerkem has devised an innovative plan to transform garbage into a source of fuel, and today it received $60 million in new financing to bring its technology to the mainstream.
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Do you know how plastic bottles are actually recycled? The amount of energy that goes into it is pretty insane, as you’ll see in this video below of the Ecostar recycling facility in Wisconsin. The amount of steps—not to mention electricity, water and manpower—that need to be taken to go from a bale of plastic bottles into safe, useable material is pretty staggering.
What’s even more staggering is that as energy-intensive as recycling is, it still gives off only half the carbon that’s produced when creating virgin materials. It makes you wonder why we don’t spend more time looking at more efficient ways to convey fluids, or if our current system of plastic bottles is really the best thing mankind can come up with.
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- Energy meets art with photographer Luca Zanier [Joao Medeiros]
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- Google takes aim at renewable energy — from wired.co.uk by Duncan Geere
Addendum 6-11-11 — also see:
[…] billion. One school. Only last week, I read about a group of MIT students that have come up with a new kind of fuel which might prove perfect for electric vehicles, using a technology that makes batteries ten times […]
Thanks for the comment — I checked out your blog feed at http://lordbanks.tumblr.com/ — keep up the good work in Nigeria!
Daniel
[…] billion. One school. Only last week, I read about a group of MIT students that have come up with a new kind of fuel which might prove perfect for electric vehicles, using a technology that makes batteries ten times […]