1. Re-Engineering the Earth

    I f we were transported forward in time, to an Earth ravaged by catastrophic climate change, we might see long, delicate strands of fire hose stretching into the sky, like spaghetti, attached to zeppelins hovering 65,000 feet in the air. Factories on the ground would pump 10 kilos of sulfur dioxide up through those hoses every second. And at the top, the hoses would cough a sulfurous pall into the sky. At sunset on some parts of the planet, these puffs of aerosolized pollutant would glow a dramatic red, like the skies in Blade Runner. During the day, they would shield the planet from the sun’s full force, keeping temperatures cool—as long as the puffing never ceased.

    Technology that could redden the skies and chill the planet is available right now. Within a few years we could cool the Earth to temperatures not regularly seen since James Watt’s steam engine belched its first smoky plume in the late 18th century. And we could do it cheaply: $100 billion could reverse anthropogenic climate change entirely, and some experts suspect that a hundredth of that sum could suffice. To stop global warming the old-fashioned way, by cutting carbon emissions, would cost on the order of $1 trillion yearly. If this idea sounds unlikely, consider that President Obama’s science adviser, John Holdren, said in April that he thought the administration would consider it, “if we get desperate enough.” And if it sounds dystopian or futuristic, consider that Blade Runner was set in 2019, not long after Obama would complete a second term.

    via Re-Engineering the Earth – The Atlantic July/August 2009.


  2. River Plant Aquarium


    [It] brings the benefits of nature indoors into a self contained living local river ecosystem. This aquarium is not only an interesting home décor piece, but also a fish hatchery and vegetable garden.

    Inhabitat » RIVER PLANT AQUARIUM by Mathieu Lehanneur (Via Yanko Design)


  3. Teen Figures Out Plastic Decomposition

    Teen Figures Out Plastic Decomposition

    Turtle-Plastic-Bag-Photo

    Some brilliant teenager name Daniel Burd achieved what many scientists have failed to do. We all know plastic does break down. It just takes about a thousands years. The fact that it breaks down means there is some natural bio process occurring and of course it turns out to be microorganisms. With this knowledge in hand, he’s figured out how to speed up the process potentially cutting down decomposition to months.

    He’s currently named America’s Top Young Scientist and hopes this discovery finds its way into mass industry.

    via Treehugger

    (via electro^plankton.)

    [tags][/tags]


  4. Plans for Foster’s Masdar Carbon Neutral City Debut

    Plans for Foster’s Masdar Carbon Neutral City Debut: “

    Foster+Partners, Norman Foster, Sustainable Architecture, Sustainable Urbanism, Green Building, green Design, Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company, Masdar, Zero Carbon, Zero Waste, Walled City

    Norman Foster’s Masdar City is poised to become world’s most sustainable, zero-waste, car-free, carbon neutral city. The model for the city was formally unveiled on 21st January at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi. We’ve talked about the grand scheme before, but the official debut deserves some new attention, given its viewing and support from everyone from General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi to the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company and even President George W. Bush. The construction would start the next month, and the city is likely to open in late 2009.

    (more…)

    Originally posted by Mahesh Basantani from INHABITAT, ReBlogged by Leah Gauthier on Feb 6, 2008 at 09:22 AM

    (Via Eyebeam reBlog.)


  5. When 1st Life Meets 2nd Life:

    When 1st Life Meets 2nd Life:: “

    384665512_97b9cb9e71.jpg

    The 1685 Pound Avatar and the 99 Ton Acre

    A Second Life avatar produces 1,685 pounds of CO2? And an acre of real estate in Second Life produces 99 tons of CO2? What gives?
    When 1st Life Meets 2nd Life:

    Originally from networked_performance by jo

    [tags]ecology, second life, video game, real, production, consumption, electronic presence[/tags]

    (Via ___ lowstandart > /reBlog.)


  6. » Clear Sky Black Cloud « performed…

    » Clear Sky Black Cloud « performed…: “

    2006_met_cloud.jpg

    »Clear Sky Black Cloud« performed outside of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. By Cai Guo-Qiang. Video.

    [tags]clouds, nature, ecology, art, performance, representation[/tags]

    (Via VVORK.)


  7. The Velocity of Thought

    The Velocity of Thought

    0letipeetlechien.jpgYesterday i was in Turin. And bored (nothing new under the sun thus) so i followed exibart‘s advice and visited the Guido Costa Projects gallery.

    Paul Etienne Lincoln was exhibiting for the first time the Panhard Special, a spectacular insect-looking vehicle planned and realised in 1976 and modified over the years. The life-sized prototype car is powered by an improved Panhard Levassor Tigre engine (launched in 1959) and fuelled by nitrous oxide, natural gas and linseed oil.

    The construction started thirty years ago, in the midst of the first oil crisis when alternative energy sources were investigated. The work explores “breathing” (the introduction of oxygen and fuel into the combustion chamber of an engine.) The goal was to create a vehicle with the cleanest possible combustion engine, and probe the theme of respiration and the man/machine relationship.

    Each part of the vehicle was designed and realized manually, with a partial knowledge of engineering and without using pieces already available on the market. The Panhard Special combines principles from early aviation and automobile design: its air-cooled Tigre engine is reminescent of the aluminium-clad nose of The Spirit of St Louis.

    0buggggbgu.jpg

    A specially designed suit allows the driver to precisely control the heated airflow from the engine to adjust his/her own body temperature. The suit, with a multitude of tubing sewn into a waistcoat, plugs via a tube into a control valve in the cockpit. Besides, inflatable implants in the back of the inner jacket insulate the driver from vibration, increased speed resulting in increased pressure in the implants.

    0respirair.jpg 0bugbiug.jpg

    The vehicle was accompanied by a collection of material describing the car’s internal fuel system and construction history as well as a short film, The Velocity of Thought, that shows the Special driven up through the spiral ramp of Giacomo Mattè Trucco‘s Lingotto factory to Lingotto‘s iconic rooftop test track.

    0itkolpoiuih.jpg
    Car chase on Lingotto’s rooftop in The Italian Job

    All information taken from the exhibition catalogue. On view until February 10, at the Guido Costa Projects gallery, in Via Mazzini 24, Turin. Big big thanks to the person who opened the gallery for us, let us enjoy the exhibition in peace and gave me the catalog.

    Images on flickr.

    Other re-vamped cars: old East German Trabant turned into an American Chevrolet El Camino; doorless BMW with its wanking robot hand.

    (via we make money not art.)

    [tags]vehicle, clothes, fashion, recycle, energy, ecology, society, body, hybrid, mechanic[/tags]


  8. View Melting Glaciers in Google Earth

    View Melting Glaciers in Google Earth

    Melting and growing glaciers in Google EarthWith concerns of global warming, one of the most dramatic signs often shown are photos of places like Glacier National Park where some glaciers have all but completely melted. One of the Google Earth Community members known as ‘blt’ has been posting some interesting information on the topic. He started with a post showing examples of retreating and advancing glaciers viewable in Google Earth. Then blt posted an image overlay showing a diagram from the Seattle Times showing the retreat of glaciers around Mt. Ranier . Next blt managed to get (or make) a Google Earth file showing data from the GLIMS (Global Land Ice Measurements from Space) database from the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC). This file shows the state of glaciers around the world and categorizes them whether they are advancing, retreating, stationary, etc. It may be surprising to some how many glaciers are actually still growing and advancing. Google Earth gives everyone an opportunity to do their own visual analysis of glaciers and compare it with other official data sources. Thanks blt!

    (via Google Earth Blog.)

    [tags]earth, map, ecology, visualisation, data[/tags]


  9. Beijing’s “No Car” Days: How to Win Friends and Not Influence Traffic

    Beijing’s “No Car” Days: How to Win Friends and Not Influence Traffic

    traffic%20jam-713465.jpg

    In a booming mega-city where 1,000 new cars hit the streets everyday, encouraging its recently-minted drivers to opt for public transportation is not an easy task. Leave it to Beijing. Over a quarter of a million of the city’s drivers have pledged to stop driving for one day over the next week in an attempt to ease traffic and improve air quality for the thousands of dignitaries attending the city’s Sino-Africa Forum. Along with gathering “no car” pledges by drivers from 476 organizations, including many of the city’s driving clubs and private businesses, the city has ordered 80 percent of the municipal government’s and half of the central government’s vehicles off the roads. They’re even shortening school hours.

    Aside from helping to feed China’s hunger for Africa’s raw materials (check this space for more coverage on that soon), the country’s biggest summit in history serves as a convenient dry run for the Olympic Games in 2008, a coming-out party for the city that is set to add 1 million people to the streets. On the one hand, the “no car” day is an impressive and good-spirited initiative, and one you’d be hard pressed to find in any other metropolis. But even if Beijing’s charm offensive (which includes painting its grass green) looks good, “no car” days haven’t had much effect before. And they’re certainly unlikely to reverse the deeper problem: years of shoddy transportation planning that have led to “11-hour rush hours” beneath perpetually mucky skies.

    (This post continues on the site please click the title)

    (Via Treehugger.)

    [tags]ecology, car[/tags]


  10. breathing earth

    breathing earth

    breathingearth.jpg
    a simple animated geographical visualization that shows the relative impact different countries have on climate change. different icons represent the statistical time-varying data of all countries (i.e. birth rate, death rate & carbon dioxide emission), which are ‘simulated’ in real time.
    see also interactive worldmap & 3d data world & gapminder & worldmapper & world processor.

    [link: breathingearth.net|thnkx Pat]

    (Via information aesthetics.)

    [tags]visualization, ecology[/tags]