Tag: energy

Empower Playground – Playground Equipment Generating Electricity for Schools in Rural Ghana

Empower Playground – Playground Equipment Generating Electricity for Schools in Rural Ghana

Each day all around the world, children play together.  In some communities and schools there are playgrounds and play equipment, but in rural Ghana, there is often no play equipment at the schools. Former ExxonMobil VP Ben Markham was volunteering with his wife as Mormon missionaries in Ghana, where he noticed the lack of electricity and basic playground equipment in most of the schools he visited.

He thought he could come up with a solution to help with this, and he worked to develop a merry-go-round that would generate about 150 watts of energy per hour as children played on it, that is stored in a battery pack.

Empower Playgrounds, founded by Markham is a nonprofit that has worked to develop these energy creating play equipment, and also works to get these systems to schools in Ghana.  Ghana is located just above the equator, and the day is divided between 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness for most of the year.  It is rated as one of the darkest places, and is great for stargazing, but maybe not so great for getting things done in the dark.

The electricity generated by Empower Playground’s merry-go-round goes to power 50 LED lanterns, that children are able to take home at night.  The playground provides equipment for up to 200 students.  Children are grouped into “Lantern Groups” according to neighborhoods, and usually have about 6 students who use the lanterns to study around the lantern.  Each lantern can last up to 50 hours per charge.

The project is ongoing, and individuals can support the project by donating money, and sharing the word about the project.  The website says that you can provide light for a child for $10 per year.

Image Source and Links:

http://emplay.squarespace.com/

History of Empower Playgrounds – YouTube Video

 

 

 

 

Got sauerkraut?  Sauerkraut Powered Robots

Got sauerkraut? Sauerkraut Powered Robots

Earlier this year, artist and programmer Jesse Hemminger organized a series of five potluck dinners at his apartment. He asked friends to bring something to eat or drink, and to bring a canning jar or empty glass spaghetti sauce jar.  He also asked them to write and bring a piece of paper something that they were holding onto and knew they needed to let go of.

At the potluck, everyone filled their jar with shredded cabbage and salt.  Hemminger let everyone know that the cabbage would ferment and transform into homemade sauerkraut.  He collected all of the sheets of paper and later shredded, pulped, and transformed them into a fresh new sheet of paper which Hemminger planned to make into a piece of art.

Sauerkraut is acidic, and can become a battery similar to lemon or potato batteries that are often created as a science experiment in the classroom.  The chemical reaction of the copper and zinc electrodes put into the acidic food creates an electrical charge.  From his potluck event, Hemminger decided to make robots powered by sauerkraut.   He also decided to have them draw on the paper that he made out of his friends papers written with the things they wanted to let go.

He has shown the sauerkraut robot drawing machines at a couple of gallery shows this year, and also this past weekend at the Ingenuity Festival in Cleveland.   I was doing a project behind him, and I watched as lots of visitors checkd out his sauerkraut batteries and  his robots as they made marks and drawings on the paper.

The small robots look like insects and have small pieces of lead attached to them.  They hop or skip around on paper while making graphite marks on the paper.  One draws lines, another makes circles.  The resulting drawings are abstract and the food batteries are a play on the “power of food.”

Image Source:
The Sauerkraut Project Blog

Links:

The Sauerkraut Project Blog

Video – The Sauerkraut Project

Jesse Hemminger Website

 

 

The Future of Fracking and the Environment – Look to Pennsylvania

The Future of Fracking and the Environment – Look to Pennsylvania

I’ll admit –when I hear the word fracking  – I get confused about what it is exactly, ad what its real impact is on the environment.  Last night I attended  The Promise and Peril of Energy from Shale Formations, at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and leaned about the current state of fracking in PA, and what this can mean for Ohio and other states.

The keynote speaker was Nels Johnson from the international organization, the Nature Conservancy, who spoke about energy use and the impact on land use, habitat, and water n Pennsylvania – and what can be learned from this.  Johnson led a research project to explore the land use and habitat impacts of fracking, natural gas, wind and other energy sources.

Ok – what is fracking exactly, and why is it increasingly being discussed and debated? Fracking is a slang term for “hydraulic fracturing” which refers to the procedure of creating fractures in rocks and rock formations by injecting fluid into cracks to force them further open. The larger fissures allow more oil and gas to flow out of the formation and into the well, where it can be extracted. This method of extraction has existed since the late 1940’s.

Directional drilling – when a drilling is done in an angle that is not vertical – has been done since the 1930s.  In 2003, these two methods were combined – using water and horizontal drilling – and has resulted in fracking – where many oil and gas wells attaining a state of economic viability, due to the level of extraction that can be reached.

Johnson began his talk by stating that, “Major shifts in energy production have started and will likely accelerate even without national energy or climate legislation.” His introduction went on to describe how the Appalachian Basin is an epicenter for several forms of energy development including the Marcellus Shale natural gas, wind, wood biomass, etc.

“All energy has consequences,” Johnson said, “and Pennsylvania is only in its early stages of impact.”  He went on to talk about how the Marcellus shale natural gas formation, which is in PA and OH,  is the 2nd largest reserve in the world, which was just recently discovered.  The Utica formation – which is a deeper formation under the Marcellus shale formation – is thought to be even bigger than Marcellus – and includes other states such as NY,NJ, WV, and some other states.

“The impact of the extraction of gas from this affects water withdrawal, water quality, air quality, land-use and the natural habitat,” Johnson explained.  Johnson and his team of a dozen researchers did a study that used informed scenarios (not predictions he emphasized) of energy development that would occur in 20 years, based on continuing current trends and patterns of energy development.

His team projected over 60-100 million acres will get shifted to energy development of shale natural gas, wind, wood biomass, and other forms in the U.S. (which is twice the size of the state of PA.)

Johnson’s organization is especially interested in the environmental impact of energy extraction.  In his presentation, Johnson talked about how the spatial impact of an energy source affects not just the land used for the energy use- but also the area around the site.  Approximately 3 acres around the edge of a site are changed due to changes in humidity, light, and other factors that affect the forests and natural regions.  Today there are 250 horizontal fracking wells in PA – and his team determined that in 20 years 60,000 new wells would be drilled by 2030.

Johnson talked about the importance of determining indicator species – wildlife that can are sensitive to water quality, temperature, etc. This is helpful in helping determining the affect of energy development on the environment.  Similar to a canary in a coalmine idea – it is important to find a wildlife species to help measure the health and welfare of the natural environment.   In PA, the brook trout is a good species indicator to see what the impact is on natural wildlife.

The team project that there will be more land clearing for pipelines.  Analysis forecasts that 10,000 to 20,000 miles of new pipeline will be built in PA in the next 20 years, clearing 60,000-150,000 acres of natural habitat.  This will affect both agriculture and natural areas.

“Gas development will happen and it is going to be big,” Johnson stated.  The last part of his presentation stressed the importance of finding ways to mitigate the impacts of gas development and energy extraction.

He suggested that this can be done by looking at states like PA, which was one of the first states to be impacted by fracking and other new forms of energy extraction.  He said, “The good, bad, and the ugly can be learned by looking at PA.”  He stressed the importance of mapping areas that are of high conservation value- and that these should be linked to high scrutiny with permits and land use.

Johnson concluded by talking about how energy extraction affects areas not just for a few years, but for a long time.  He stressed the importance of planning and establishing baselines before the drilling and extraction is underway.  He stated that education about this is important, especially to to help landowners make informed choices.  If we know what we want – we can work to try to mitigate the impacts of energy production.

I had to leave before the rest of the panel talked about Ohio  – but I left with a better understanding of fracking, and the future of energy use.

The Pennsylvania Energy Impacts Assessment that Johnson presented can be viewed on the Nature Conservancy website.

Links:

Pennsylvania Energy Report – by Johnson and his Team

Map of the Existing and Projected Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Wells in PA

Interactive Map of the PA Energy Impacts Asessment

Nature Conservancy Website – http://www.nature.org/

The promise and peril of Ohio and PA’s fracking for gas Event – GreenCityBlueLake

 

 

“Microtecture,” Off the Grid LED Lighting, and the Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting

“Microtecture,” Off the Grid LED Lighting, and the Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting

Last night I attended the first Designers Accord Town Hall meeting in Cleveland.  Hosted by  SmartShape Design, CIA, IDSA Northeast Ohio Chapter and AIGA Cleveland Chapter at the Cleveland Institute of Art, the event was intended to create discussion on how design can create positive environmental and social impact in the local community and beyond.

There were several presentations by designers in Cleveland which included David Levine of Wireless Environment ( a company focusing on off the grid LED lighting), King Heiple of Recharge Power (a company which produces products that are for recharging electric cars), PJ Doran, of APOC ( a group which rescues and upcycles good wood from houses) and F*SHO Collective (annual furniture show in the Cleveland area), and Doug Paige, from the Cleveland Institute of Art.

The presentations focused on presenting an overview of what the companies and groups did – and each presenter would end the presentation by framing  some key questions for discussion – which were to be discussed in later breakout sessions.

Some of the highlights of the night:

David Levine summary which included the questions, “ What if a light could go on and off the grid – like a laptop?  What can be wireless in 2015?  What if lights would store up power at night, when the cost of power is cheaper, and go off the grid during the day?”

PJ Doran presented about his current project in microtecture, trying to make small 150-200 square feet living spaces that are affordable, low-maintainance, that have a low impact on the land,  and can be moved.  His presentation was the most engaging of the night – and he showed several interesting examples of microtecture and presented the question, “How can we create creative sustainable, small living solutions?”

Doug Paige, who I work with at the Cleveland Institute of Art,  talked about a current group project he is a part of which is using biomimiciry o create solutions to the challenges of desalination of water.  (biomiciry is a process where models, systems and process of nature are examined to solve human problems.)   The project addresses the question of, “ How can we crate efficient, modular desalination systems that work with the principles or “rules” of nature?”

This was the first event organized by the Cleveland group of The Designers Accord – which is a global coalition of designers, educators, and business leaders working together to create positive environmental and social impact.  The group has a Design Education toolkit that you can view on the  site or download as a PDF.

I had to leave before the breakout and discussions began – but the information will be posted online at a later date- on the Designer Accord website  – presenting ideas about Cleveland, design, and sustainability and social impact.

LINKS:

The Designers Accord Site

IDSA Northeast Ohio Chapter

AIGA Cleveland Chapter

A Piece of Cleveland (APOC)

F*Sho Cleveland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Want to buy a energy smarthome?

Want to buy a energy smarthome?

The PNC ultra-high-tech SmartHome, which was constructed last spring on site at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, moved yesterday to its permanent site on Wade Park Avenue and is for sale.  The house was put on a large flatbed – and was driven to its new location.

The Smart home is all-electric, but is designed to use 90% less heating and cooling energy than a typical home. While on site at CMNH, over 10,000 people toured the house.

The home was designed by Chuck Miller of Doty & Miller Architects in Cleveland. Certified Passive House Consultant Mark Hoberecht of HarvestBuild Associates will oversee SmartHome Cleveland’s adherence to the standards of the Passive House Institute US.

The home’s construction on its temporary site at the museum coincided with the exhibit on global climate change on display at the museum .  It also was timed with Cleveland’s 10-year campaign to remake the region’s economy through sustainable business practices which  named 2011 – the year of energy efficiency.

The super-energy efficient, two-story house is for sale and is listed with Howard Hanna for $329,000.

 View the house listing

Read more about the house on CMNH.org

Image credit : Lisa DeJohn, The Plain Dealer Monday October 24th