By Jeff Kart •
September 26, 2009
The idea looks like a cool new version of the old SimCity computer game. You link a city to a solar manufacturing plant to a solar farm. The plant employs the people, the farm collects the energy and the city is up and running.
But this isn’t a game, it’s a pitch from Applied Materials, a Fortune 500 company known for making computer microchips.
They call it the best idea in the last 4 billion years.
By Jeff Kart •
September 23, 2009
U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu was on to something when he suggested we start painting our roofs white to fight climate change.
We’ll soon be able to use a specialized paint to collect rooftop solar energy, too. Could this be the answer to neighborhood Christmas light wars?
The stuff is called silicon ink, and the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory says that solar cells using the technology have “demonstrated a record 18 percent conversion of efficiency,” according to cnet.com.
By Jeff Kart •
September 17, 2009
Solar power comes in many forms, from rigid to thin film. The panels are shiny, gleaming and ready to harness the power of the sun.
They’re also usually silver. Yet they also come in colors, not just for looks, but for efficiency.
By Jeff Kart •
September 1, 2009
Magnum D’Or Resources Inc., a rubber recycling company, now owns one of the world’s largest tire landfills in Hudson, Colorado. But they’re not going to just leave it there. Old tires are bad because they breed mosquitoes, and a tire fire will burn for months.
By Jeff Kart •
August 28, 2009
Is Al Costa pulling our leg? The CEO of Delaware-based Alkol Inc. says he has a system that will convert your car to run on E85 in about an hour.
“Flexing” your vehicle with the Alkol conversion system will allow you to use one of those high-ethanol pumps, which contain a mix of 85 percent ethanol, as opposed to the normal 10 percent mix in conventional gasoline. You won’t need a brand new shiny vehicle with one of those “Flex Fuel” badges either.
How does it work? Does it work? Is it like one of those quick-fix radiator sealer bottles that high school kids used to pour into their old jalopies?
By Jeff Kart •
August 21, 2009
If you want to cut your carbon footprint, you can ride your bike a little more. If you want to cut it even further (from all that exhaling while pedaling), meet the EniCycle. This one-wheeled ride has a range of just under 19 miles on a charge. But it recharges when you ride it downhill (if you dare).
By Jeff Kart •
August 19, 2009
Labor Day will soon be upon us, and with it, the unofficial end of summer. Back to school time. Summer is the season for camping, getting out of the city and getting a little dirty in the woods. Some folks like to tent it. Some folks like a travel trailer, with their own bathroom (my wife included).
But one problem with campers is how much they weigh, the large vehicles needed to tow them and frequent trips to the gas station. Travel trailers are getting lighter and lighter, however, and easier and more affordable to pull. Take a look at the latest entry, from EverGreen (like the tree) in Middlebury, Indiana.
By Jeff Kart •
August 19, 2009
Aug. 29 is the fourth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and Kanye West’s “George Bush doesn’t care about black people” comment on live TV.
The rebuilding of New Orleans continues. And it’s being rebuilt in shades of green.
According to a “New Orleans Green Building Assessment” released by the Sierra Club, the devastation of 2005 has provided the city with a unique opportunity to develop a national model for rebuilding with sustainability in mind.
By Jeff Kart •
August 17, 2009
The summer of 2009 has been cooler than usual in the Midwest, but Mother Nature can still pack a punch.
August has seen some 90-degree days in places like Michigan.
When it get this hot, some people like to stay inside in front of the air conditioner (based on recent Twitter and Facebook updates). But it doesn’t have to be this way.
The air conditioner, I mean.
A “whole house fan” that uses the attic for venting can keep your home cool with less electricity (and for less money) than modern-day air conditioning.
By Jeff Kart •
August 17, 2009
You know the drill. You flush the toilet, walk away, come back later and it’s still running.
You jiggle the handle. Hopefully that makes it stop. Maybe you take off the top of the tank and swear a little.
Or, you could install H2Orb, a toilet gadget from a California company that takes clean tech to a whole new level.