It's mostly bad news when it gets under your shoes, but scientists now believe cow dung may be more of a blessing in disguise than previously believed. According to a team at the University of Texas Austin, if the manure from hundreds of millions of livestock in the U.S. were to go through anaerobic digestion—a fermentation process similar to one to create compost—it could turn into an energy-rich biogas. The gas would be efficient enough to produce 100 billion kilowatt hours of electricity; that could meet about 3 percent of North America's entire consumption needs.
Indeed. Popular Science itself had articles about anaerobic digester designs way back in the 70s. It's almost like the magazine has forgotten its own history. There's so much that seems to have been consigned to the dustbin of history once the oil embargo passed back then. Passive solar collectors. Underground houses. How we squandered the decades living in blissful and intentional ignorance.
Bel-Air Cost to Develop: $236,000 Time: 1 year Prototype | | | | | Product Your home could be emitting toxic gases. Just ask the victims of Hurricane Katrina, whose emergency trailers, made with glue-laden particleboard, let off so much formaldehyde that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned that residents should spend time outdoors and make relocating to permanent housing a priority. Even in more expensive new homes, the concentration of emissions from things like furniture, carpet and paint can be two to five times as high as it is outdoors. But most air filters only catch particulates such as dust and pollen rather than organic compounds like formaldehyde and benzene, and the filters that do trap those gases need frequent replacement. So Mathieu LeHanneur and David Edwards built an ultra-efficient filtration system that eliminates toxins using natures own hazmat squad: plants.
I remember reading articles in Popular Science in the 80s about this concept. Bill Wolverton came up with the concept to clean air in spacecraft. He even had the idea to have a fan suck air through the soil, where microbes could help degrade the chemicals. Harry Ru, the plants don't just absorb toxins and die. They break down the chemicals. The only thing this product does is try to package everything in a neat container, which doesn't make it a new or ingenious invention, just decent product design.


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