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    Earth Unlimited? - 500 Beiträge pro Seite (Seite 4)

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      schrieb am 09.05.18 22:52:15
      Beitrag Nr. 1.501 ()



      http://www.rdmag.com/news/2018/05/step-aside-superman-steel-…

      "Step Aside Superman, Steel is no Competition for this New Material






      When it comes to materials, there is no question as to who wins the strongman competition. Spider silk is known as being the strongest fabric, and steel, ceramics and glass fibers are the best building materials. But now, researchers are reporting in ACS Nano that specially arranged nano-sized cellulose fibers are the strongest material of them all, in a move that might cause some to re-name Superman the "man of cellulose."

      Although technology has rapidly advanced, researchers are still playing catch-up with nature. Recently, scientists have been trying to mimic the architecture of natural materials on the nanoscale level with the hopes that it would translate to larger-scale strength. For example, a strong, stiff cell wall layer in wood is made up of cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs), and the organization of this material has served as inspiration for the creation of strong, macroscale substances. But poor adhesion and un-aligned components have prevented researchers from realizing this goal. So, Daniel S?derberg and colleagues sought to overcome these limitations.

      The team used flow-assisted assembly to organize CNFs into a near-perfect alignment within macroscale fibers. Even the weakest fiber they made with the method was stronger than other CNF fibers previously reported. Most importantly, the macroscale fibers were stronger than metal, alloys and glass fibers. And they are both stronger and eight times stiffer than dragline spider silk, which is the gold standard for lightweight biopolymers, at the same specific strength. The researchers say that the material could be useful in many load-bearing applications, such as light-weight bio-based composites for cars and bikes, as well as high-performance medical implants."
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      schrieb am 10.05.18 00:50:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.502 ()
      "Globally, 767 million people live on less than $1.90 per day, 80 percent live in rural areas and 64 percent work in agriculture.
      By 2030, some will migrate to urban areas, but most will not, and the rural population in less developed regions will increase slightly. Most of the income gains needed to end poverty by 2030 therefore will need to come from activities in rural areas.
      About half the global poor live in Sub-Saharan Africa, while one-third live in South Asia.
      Lifting these people out of extreme pov-erty will require average income gains of at least 60 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa and at least 30 percent in Asia.8"
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 10.05.18 03:36:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.503 ()
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      schrieb am 10.05.18 11:39:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.504 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.730.978 von Popeye82 am 10.05.18 00:50:31" Over the next 15 years, about 1.6 billion people will reach working age in low and middle-income countries.9 Automation and the digital revolution are driving productivity and income growth, but also threaten significant job losses, especially in developing countries. Sustaining and improving the quality ofself and wage employment of the billions of people already working, and creating new jobs to absorb those reaching working age will be a significant challenge. The food system currently contributes a significant share of jobs in all countries with the potential to create new jobs in growing value chains."
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      schrieb am 10.05.18 12:47:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.505 ()

      Trading Spotlight

      Anzeige
      InnoCan Pharma
      0,1995EUR +1,01 %
      Der geheime Übernahme-Kandidat?!mehr zur Aktie »
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      schrieb am 11.05.18 04:55:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.506 ()
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 11.05.18 06:02:26
      Beitrag Nr. 1.507 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.737.653 von Popeye82 am 11.05.18 04:55:49
      - The Trendlines Group
      Am 04.06.2015 veröffentlicht
      AgriVest is the Israeli agritech investment event sponsored by The Trendlines Group, Israel's Ministry of Economy, and GreenSoil Investments.

      Presentation at AgriVest 2015 (April 27, 2015) by Rafi Meissner, CEO of Rootility, which won the Best Company award at AgriVest 2013.

      See more at http://trendlines.com/agritech-invest... -








      - The Trendlines Group
      Am 07.01.2014 veröffentlicht
      This video includes:
      Nitza Kardish's explanation of the competition at Agrivest 2013.
      The following company presentations:
      Plantarray - 1:28 - 5:37
      EdenShield - 6:19 - 11:00
      Rootility - 11:15 - 17:00
      Metabolic Robots - 17:00 - 23:20 -
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 11.05.18 06:26:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.508 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.737.680 von Popeye82 am 11.05.18 06:02:26
      - The Trendlines Group
      Am 03.06.2015 veröffentlicht
      AgriVest is the Israeli agritech investment event sponsored by The Trendlines Group, Israel's Ministry of Economy, and GreenSoil Investments.

      Welcome and opening remarks from Nitza Kardish (Trendlines Agtech), Oded Distel (Israel Ministry of Economy), and Steve Rhodes (The Trendlines Group) AgriVest 2015, April 27, 2015.

      See more at http://trendlines.com/agritech-invest... -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.05.18 08:14:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.509 ()
      the world is EXPLODING








      https://agfundernews.com/uns-sustainable-development-goals-b…

      "UN’s Sustainable Development Goals are ‘Business Opportunities’ for Ag Biotech Startups

      May 9, 2018 Devika Balachandran
      Share on LinkedInTweet about this on TwitterShare on Facebook


      The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals have created business opportunities for small companies, according to Peder Holk Nielsen, CEO of Novozymes, a Copenhagen-based biotech company that produces unique enzymes to promote sustainability across agriculture, bioenergy, food and beverages, and household care products.



      Nielsen was speaking at the Techonomy NYC conference, where leaders in diverse industries from across the world came together to discuss how technology can support responsible and sustainable growth. During a series of talks about corporate responsibility in mitigating natural resource constraints due to overconsumption and climate change, leaders in biotech came together to discuss how naturally-occurring chemical processes, such as those catalyzed by specific enzymes or facilitated by yeast, can be harnessed to promote sustainability.

      “The world is exploding right now with genetic information, and this gives us a wealth of opportunities to increase yield with fewer inputs,” said Nielsen. “However, we have been at a standstill since the financial crisis, and we have lost about 10 years. Is it now an issue of speed, rather than technology [that prevents us from meeting our goals]. It is really important for governments and companies to work together. As a company, we are doing everything we can so that governments understand the impact of our technology and create regulations around it.”

      In agriculture, Novozymes products provide specific combinations of naturally-occurring microbes that can be added to soil to promote greater yield in corn and soybean fields. Novozymes has also teamed up with Monsanto to create the BioAg Alliance, which has products in its pipeline to use naturally occurring fungi and microbes to improve nutritional uptake of corn, soybeans, and wheat.

      John Melo, CEO of Amyris, a California-based biotech company that uses yeast to generate specific compounds from sugarcane, is focused on using his company’s technology to reduce the amount of resources required in industrial processes, such as manufacturing flavor and fragrance products and skin care products.

      “We are the world’s lowest-cost, fastest, and most effective genetic programmers of yeast. We use yeast to produce things we would otherwise have to use animals for,” says Melo of Amyris’s mission. For example, synthesizing squalane — an emollient used in skincare — from sugarcane, Amyris has saved about 2-3 million sharks a year from being killed, since squalane is traditionally harvested from shark liver oil.

      Beyond driving commercial biotech companies, the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals are critical to supporting growers in developing countries as well. “One of the most important stories of today is water. Water runs across all the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals,” said J. Carl Ganter, the co-founder of Circle of Blue, which focuses on reporting on the importance of water resource issues related to food and energy. According to Ganter, coastal shifts and sea level rise are forcing rice farmers in Vietnam to convert their flooded rice paddies to shrimp farms, while farmers in India are using wastewater from paper mills and raw sewage to irrigate their crops due to a lack of safe water.

      See our summary of a report on how investment in agriculture is critical to meeting the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals here."
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.05.18 08:27:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.510 ()

      https://agfundernews.com/report-investing-in-small-scale-agr…

      https://ag-transition.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Investm…
      https://ag-transition.org/?reports=investments-in-small-scal…
      http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-develop…
      http://www.accessagriculture.org/
      https://ag-transition.org/
      http://www.moreandbetter.org/en/documents/
      "Report: Investing in Small-Scale Agriculture is 3x More Effective at Reducing Poverty Than Other Industries

      April 25, 2017 Louisa Burwood-Taylor
      Share on LinkedInTweet about this on TwitterShare on Facebook


      The vast majority of the people in the world — about 70% — get their food from small-scale farmers and other small-scale food producers such as fisher-people, pastoralists, and hunters.

      And yet, at the same time, small-scale farmers and their families make up most of the 800 million people suffering from hunger and the 2 billion people living in extreme poverty, according to a new report by the More and Better Network, a global network for food, agriculture and rural development.

      If the United Nations and participating governments are to reach goals one and two of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) — to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture — more investment and support is needed for small-scale agriculture, reads the report.

      The Food and Agriculture Organization states that growth in the agriculture industries of developing countries is on average 2.9 times more effective at reducing poverty relative to non-agriculture GDP growth
      .


      That’s even higher in some nations such as China, where it’s 3.5 times more effective in reducing poverty than growth outside agriculture, according to the World Bank.

      Despite this, agriculture is largely underfunded and they do not have sufficient access to the finances they need. Less than a quarter of the financial needs of small-scale farmers in developing countries are met, leaving an annual financing gap of more than $150 billion according to Blending4AG.

      Local governments are not meeting their goals for agriculture investment; governments allocated less than 2% with a progressively declining share of their central government expenditures to agriculture between 2001 and 2015, from 1.6% to 1.3%.

      The governments in Africa agreed in 2003 to allocate at least 10% of the national budgets to agriculture within five years, but between 2001 and 2015 they allocated less than 2%. They recommitted the goal in 2014, but still, only nine of the 54 African governments have reached their common goal.

      Small-scale agriculture is also underfunded in development assistance from OECD-countries, and private investors.

      The report entitled Investments in small-scale sustainable agriculture points out that there is an urgent need not only for more investments in small-scale sustainable agriculture, but also to develop new forms of investments with shared risks and benefits for the investors and the small-scale farmers. It also lays out 12 steps to transitioning to sustainable agriculture.

      The More and Better Network has started a small pilot project in Mozambique to use the 12 steps as a guideline and to undertake some new forms of investment with the financial support from the Heidehof Stiftung – a German foundation. The plan is to expand such small pilot projects both in Mozambique and in other countries with both grants and investments in 2018 and then expand further based on their experiences.

      The report presents an overview of financial institutions organizations and networks engaged in investing in agriculture. It also presents the possibilities’ for further investment and support for small-scale agriculture in developing countries.

      Download it here.

      Foundations, investors and others that are interested in more information and/or to be involved in this work, email Aksel Naerstad, international co-coordinator of the More and Better Network."
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      schrieb am 11.05.18 08:38:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.511 ()
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      schrieb am 11.05.18 12:53:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.512 ()
      " Hooooow the EU is scaring away energy investors
















      Europe will need to attract hundreds of billions euros in private investment to finance the energy transition over the next few decades.

      Yet EU institutions – the European Commission and the European Court of Justice – as well as Member States seem to be doing their best to scare away private capital, writes Alan Riley, Senior Fellow at the Institute for Statecraft in London, in an article written for Energy Post.

      The European Court of Justice has, amazingly according to Riley, just outlawed the entire intra-EU bilateral investment treaty regime (in the Slovakia vs. Achmea case).

      The European Commission in its turn has declared compensation awarded to Spanish renewable energy producers under the Energy Charter Treaty as a form of illegal state aid. At the national level, Member States are routinely guilty of arbitrary policy reversals.

      Riley offers a number of practical solutions to improve the investment climate for renewable energy projects, including the possibility of setting up EU district courts. An important article which you can read here.

      The EU is known for its ambitious climate policies, but according to Oliver Geden of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Vivian Scott of the University of Edinburgh and James Palmer of the University of Bristol, there is an elephant in the room which is being ignored by Brussels: carbon dioxide removal.

      The three researchers point out that all credible scenarios to meet the Paris Agreement’s targets include negative emissions technologies, yet there is no policy in place to make these possible. And without a policy, they add, nothing is likely to happen. Another important article here for you to read on Energy Post!

      More warnings for the EU: “In renewables there are more investments today in the US and China than in Europe”, notes Gonzalo Saenz de Miera, who is the Director of Climate Change at Iberdrola, one of the biggest producers of renewable energy in the world.

      In an interview with Energy Post, Saenz de Miera says “Europe is losing its leadership.” He calls on the EU to adopt a binding target for 2050, not just 2030, and for it to be more ambitious than the current 80-95% greenhouse gas emission reduction.

      He also advocates “polluter pays” taxation that would put a heavier burden on transport. You can read part of the interview here, but note that it links to our premium publication Energy Post Weekly.

      Although there is plenty to be worried about when it comes to climate and energy policy, it does not mean we should give up hope that we will not achieve anything. At least that’s the view of climate change economist Adam Whitmore, who has written an optimistic post on his blog, which we are glad to republish on Energy Post.

      Whitmore sees six resaons to be more optimistic about climate change than five years ago!

      Energy companies find themselves under increasing pressure today to improve their reporting on climate, environmental and social aspects. In the EU they are even legally obliged to do so under the Non-financial Reporting Directive adopted in 2014.

      But how transparent and useful are the reports that they are producing? How should they be used by policymakers or investors? How can they be compared to each other?

      Freelance journalist Clare Taylor interviewed a number of experts on non-financial reporting and learned that this is a development that has only just started. There is more legislation to come, said one specialist. And one NGO is working on an international benchmark to be able to compare companies’ non-financial reports. You can read her article here.

      What is more, Energy Post will co-host a lunch debate on “Global non-financial reporting trends in the energy sector” in Brussels on 16 May, together with Lukoil. So if you are interested in this topic and based in Brussels, do come and join us. I will be your moderator. You can register here.

      This week the big news was all about the Iran deal of course. On Monday we published an excellent interview debate with a supporter and a critic of the deal, conducted by Rachel Brandenburg of the Atlantic Council in Washington DC.

      We know now how the story ended, but this is still an excellent read to understand what the deal is all about and one of the very few places where you can find a direct exchange of views between two well-informed people on this topic. Recommended.

      Personally, I have no doubt about who is right in this discussion. I regard Trump’s decision as yet one more instance of his short-sighted “America First” foreign policy which shows contempt for the interests and concerns of other people who happen to live on this planet.

      I took the liberty on this occasion to republish an article by one of my favourite authors on U.S. foreign policy, Tom Engelhardt of Tomdispatch.com, which puts the actions of the U.S. in a wider historical perspective. Engelhardt shows how the U.S. has become in many ways a mirror image of the extremists it says it’s fighting. You can read the article here – a caveat: it’s not about energy.

      What does the U.S. withdrawal from the Iran deal mean for the oil market? According to Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com, Saudi Arabia might be the great benefactor, as oil prices have shot up after Trump’s announcement.

      Yet at the same time the U.S. government is putting pressure on Saudi Arabia to pump more oil and thereby effectively put an end to the OPEC agreement that is currently in place to limit oil production. Thus, the Saudis, who are very much opposed to the Iran deal, are put in a difficult dilemma. You can read Cunningham’s article here.

      On Energy Post Weekly – our premium, subscription-based newsletter – our Brussels correspondent Sonja van Renssen looks at the implications of the proposed new EU budget for the energy sector, in addition to the interview with Saenz de Miera of Iberdrola (see above).

      In my own weekly Energy Watch column, I write about an interesting new report from consultancy Energy Brainpool which compares the cost of new nuclear power in Eastern Europe with power-to-gas renewable energy plants.

      I also look at Eurelectric’s two new reports on blockchain and compare those with other informed opinions. (Eurelectric is rather skeptical of blockchain.)

      Also worth looking at: a new report from the IEA, IRENA and a number of other global think tanks shows that the share of renewable energy in the world declined last year and the share of fossil fuels went up!"
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      schrieb am 14.05.18 22:34:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.513 ()
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      schrieb am 14.05.18 23:23:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.514 ()
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      schrieb am 15.05.18 00:17:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.515 ()
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      schrieb am 15.05.18 04:31:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.516 ()
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      schrieb am 15.05.18 05:30:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.517 ()
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      schrieb am 15.05.18 14:25:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.518 ()
      http://www.energy.gov/articles/department-energy-announces-1…
      http://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2018/04/f51/FY17%20VT…
      http://www.energy.gov/eere/vehicles/vehicle-technologies-off…

      " Department of Energy Announces $19 Million for Advanced Battery and Electrification Research to Enable EXTREME Fast Charging


      WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $19 million to support twelve new cost-shared research projects focused on batteries and vehicle electrification technologies to enable extreme fast charging. Selected research projects are focused on developing electric vehicle systems that can recharge rapidly at high power levels, decreasing typical charge times to 15 minutes or less using a connector or wireless fast charging system.

      DOE’s Vehicle Technologies Office within the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy invests in early-stage research to enable private-sector development and commercialization of affordable, energy efficient transportation technologies that can strengthen our energy security, support U.S. economic growth, and offer consumers and businesses additional transportation choices. The projects announced today will help advance DOE’s research on batteries and electrification aimed at reducing battery pack cost to under $100 per kilowatt-hour, increasing range to over 300 miles, and charging in under 15 minutes or less by 2028.

      Recharging current EV batteries takes much longer than refueling the average liquid-fueled internal combustion vehicle. Slower charge rates are required to allow the lithium-ions to penetrate to the deepest portions of the active material on the electrode. Charging at too high a rate runs the risk of lithium plating, increased battery temperature, and other detrimental side chemical reactions which decrease life and performance characteristics of the batteries. The nine selected battery projects listed below focus on advanced anodes, electrolytes, and battery cell designs that can be charged rapidly - in less than 10 minutes - while still maintaining performance over the 10 year life goal.

      - Regents of the University of California, University of California San Diego (San Diego, CA) - $650,000

      - Pennsylvania State University (University Park, PA) - $1,000,000

      - Regents of the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI) - $1,500,000

      - SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (Menlo Park, CA) - $1,500,000

      - Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge, TN) - $900,000

      - Microvast Inc. (Orlando, FL) - $1,500,000

      _ Research Foundation for the State University of New York - Stony Brook University (Stony Brook, NY) - $800,000

      - University of Tennessee (Knoxville, TN) - $720,000

      - Coulometrics, LLC (Chattanooga, TN) - $1,000,000


      The three selected electrification projects listed below will develop and verify electric drive systems and infrastructure for electric vehicle extreme fast charging, which increases charging power levels from current home charging at 7 kW to power levels up to 400 kW. They will also reduce typical charging times from 8 hours down to 15 minutes or less.

      - Wireless Advanced Vehicle Electrification Inc. (Salt Lake City, UT) - $4,300,000

      - Delta Products Corporation (Fremont, CA) - $3,500,000

      - Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge, TN) - $2,200,000


      To learn more about the projects selected today and DOE’s work with industry, academia, and other partners on advanced vehicle technologies, please visit the Vehicle Technologies Office website. "
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      schrieb am 15.05.18 17:07:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.519 ()
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      schrieb am 16.05.18 03:00:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.520 ()
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      schrieb am 16.05.18 04:25:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.521 ()
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      schrieb am 16.05.18 14:51:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.522 ()
      Insect-sized bots are breaking their tethers:eek::eek::eek:






      - Behold RoboFly, a laser-powered robot that weighs in at slightly heavier than a toothpick.
      The challenge: Insect-bots require a relatively large amount of power to move their wings fast enough to take off. Batteries are too large and heavy to fly, so previous robots of this size had to be plugged in.
      The solution: A laser pointed at a photovoltaic cell provides the RoboFly with electricity. (See a video of RoboFly in action here)
      Whyyyyy it matters???????????????????????????????????: Robots like this could one day assist with tasks like crop surveillance, search and rescue, or gas leak detection. Just don’t mistakenly swat your mini-assistant out of the air. -
      http://www.washington.edu/news/2018/05/15/robofly/
      http://www.wired.com/story/this-insect-sized-flying-robot-is…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 16.05.18 15:04:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.523 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.772.609 von Popeye82 am 16.05.18 14:51:10GIANT leap






      - UW (University of Washington)
      Am 15.05.2018 veröffentlicht
      Engineers at the University of Washington have created RoboFly, the first wireless flying robotic insect. This might be one small flap for a robot, but it’s one giant leap for robot-kind. Read more: http://www.washington.edu/news/2018/0... -
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      schrieb am 17.05.18 16:30:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.524 ()
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      schrieb am 18.05.18 02:33:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.525 ()

      http://www.rdmag.com/article/2018/05/scientists-find-new-way…

      "A new system using a thin copper-based catalyst and a new experimental strategy can convert greenhouse gas into a valuable renewable hydrocarbon.

      Researchers from the University of Toronto have developed a new process to capture carbon dioxide (CO₂) produced by industrial processes and used renewable electricity, like solar power, and transform it into ethylene, a common industrial chemical that is a precursor to many commonly used plastics.

      “When we performed the CO2 conversion to ethylene in very basic media, we found that our catalyst improved both the energy efficiency and selectivity of the conversion to the highest levels ever recorded,” post-doctoral fellow Cao-Thang Dinh, PhD, the first author on the paper, said in a statement.

      The new system overcomes a significant barrier associated with carbon capture because it results in a commercially valuable product like ethylene. While technology exists to filter and extract CO2 from flue gases, the substance currently has little economic value that can offset the cost of capturing it.

      The researchers then addressed the system’s stability, which has been a challenge with this type of copper-based catalyst. Theoretical modelling shows that basic conditions—high pH levels—are ideal for catalyzing CO2 to ethylene. However, under these conditions most catalysts with their supports, break down after less than 10 hours.

      The new setup, which improved the efficiency and selectivity, is able to protect the support and catalyst from degrading because of the basic solution. It also enables it to last 15 times longer than previously catalysts.

      “Over the last few decades, we've known that operating this reaction under basic conditions would help, but no one knew how to take advantage of that knowledge and transfer it into a practical system,” Dinh said. “We've shown how to overcome that challenge.”

      The researchers were able to alter their experimental setup by depositing their catalyst on a porous support layer made of Teflon (polytetrafluoethylene) and sandwiched the catalyst with carbon on the other side.

      The system is currently capable of performing the conversion on a laboratory scale and producing several grams of ethylene at a time. Eventually the researchers would like to scale the technology to the point where they are able to convert multiple tons of chemicals needed for commercial application.

      "We made three simultaneous advances in this work: selectivity, energy-efficiency and stability," says Sargent. "As a group, we are strongly motivated to develop technologies that help us realize the global challenge of a carbon-neutral future.""
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      schrieb am 18.05.18 03:54:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.526 ()
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      schrieb am 21.05.18 14:24:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.527 ()
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      schrieb am 23.05.18 05:17:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.528 ()
      wohnen wie Peter LUSTIG; sind mini Häuser DIE Rettung????????????????????????????

      http://www.zeit.de/wirtschaft/2018-05/tiny-houses-tchibo-woh…
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      schrieb am 23.05.18 12:58:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.529 ()
      the bio-based economy can feed the world and help defeat climate change –UN agency

      http://www.biobasedworldnews.com/the-bio-based-economy-can-f…








      - Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
      Am 31.10.2017 veröffentlicht
      Currently, the majority of food packaging solutions contain fossil-based plastics, which are produced and consumed in an unsustainable manner. Significant amount of plastic food packaging ends up as litter. Plastic litter results in high waste management costs, pollution of our land and marine environment. In this video, FAO highlights the importance of substituting fossil-based with sustainable bio-based food packaging made of agriculture and wood residues. If these raw materials are sourced locally, it will also help improve farmers’ livelihoods and enhance rural development.

      Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_c...

      Follow #UNFAO on social media!
      * Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/UNFAO
      * Google+ - https://plus.google.com/+UNFAO
      * Instagram - https://instagram.com/unfao/
      * LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/fao
      * Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/faoknowledge

      © FAO: http://www.fao.org -
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      schrieb am 23.05.18 20:59:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.530 ()
      (pure)DNA tastes like prehistoric ocea





      "Until this week, I had no idea what foot-long invasive worms tasted like, but I have an answer, and that is the worst, according to biologist Jean-Lou Justine. Justine, who determined France is now home to predatory flatworms from Asia, said his colleague was compelled to try one. That researcher has not stopped talking about how he regrets the decision.

      His experience did, however, get me thinking about other people who have put their taste buds to use in the pursuit of knowledge. In that spirit, here's A Brief List of People Who Have Tasted Things for Reasons, Scientific and Quasi-:

      1) The French researcher who tasted the flatworm, as stated above, said it was one of the worst experiences of his life. (The worms produce noxious chemicals to discourage would-be predators from consuming them.)
      2) Pure DNA tastes like the prehistoric ocean, according to journalist Richard Preston. “I found out you can order DNA in the mail, so I ordered some and it came in a little bottle of dried fluff ... it tasted like the earth's early ocean — a mildly salty taste and a little tiny hint of sweetness,” he said in a 2008 interview.
      3) Fossil hunters sometimes use a lick test to distinguish rocks from bones. “The porous nature of some fossil bones will cause it to slightly stick to your tongue if you lick it,” Brian Switek writes at the Smithsonian, “though you might want to have a glass of water handy if you feel compelled to try this.”
      4) This one's a bit of a cheat, because no one has licked the center of the Milky Way galaxy, but if we could, astronomers suspect it would have a raspberry tang. In 2009, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy detected the chemical signature of a molecule called ethyl formate at the galactic center. Ethyl formate, one astronomer told the Guardian, is the chemical that gives raspberries part of their flavor.
      5) The planet's very old water is very gross. University of Toronto earth scientist Barbara Sherwood Lollar, who studied a pocket of 2.6-billion-year-old water discovered more than a mile below the surface, said to the Los Angeles Times it was “much saltier than seawater” and more viscous than what comes from a tap.
      6) In 1984, paleontologists put the neck meat of a bison carcass, found frozen in Alaskan mud and possibly 36,000 to 50,000 years old, into a stew. It wasn't bad, they decided, if a bit earthy.

      — Ben"
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.05.18 20:56:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.531 ()
      Yield, Yield, Yield: The Yield REVOLUTION is Coming, Fast

      http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/05/23/a-yield-rev…
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.05.18 23:12:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.532 ()
      could a Particle Accelerator Using Laser-Driven Implosion Become a Reality????????????????????????????????????????????

      http://www.rdmag.com/news/2018/05/could-particle-accelerator…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 25.05.18 23:23:41
      Beitrag Nr. 1.533 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.05.18 01:41:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.534 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.05.18 02:44:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.535 ()

      http://www.rdmag.com/news/2018/05/scientists-shrink-chemistr…

      "Scientists Shrink Chemistry Lab to Seek Evidence, of Life on Mars
      Fri, 05/25/2018 - 9:45am
      by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center


      An international team of scientists has created a tiny chemistry lab for a rover that will drill beneath the Martian surface looking for signs of past or present life. The toaster oven-sized lab, called the Mars Organic Molecule Analyzer or MOMA, is a key instrument on the ExoMars Rover, a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Russian space agency Roscosmos, with a significant contribution to MOMA from NASA. It will be launched toward the Red Planet in July 2020.

      "The ExoMars Rover's two-meter deep drill will provide MOMA with unique samples that may contain complex organic compounds preserved from an ancient era, when life might have gotten started on Mars," said MOMA Project Scientist Will Brinckerhoff of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

      Although the surface of Mars is inhospitable to known forms of life today, there is evidence that in the distant past, the Martian climate allowed the presence of liquid water - an essential ingredient for life - at the surface. This evidence includes features that resemble dry riverbeds and mineral deposits that only form in the presence of liquid water. NASA has sent rovers to Mars that have found additional signs of past habitable environments, such as the Opportunity and Curiosity rovers both currently exploring the Martian terrain.

      The MOMA instrument will be capable of detecting a wide variety of organic molecules. Organic compounds are commonly associated with life, although they can be created by non-biological processes as well. Organic molecules contain carbon and hydrogen, and can include oxygen, nitrogen, and other elements. To find these molecules on Mars, the MOMA team had to take instruments that would normally occupy a couple of workbenches in a chemistry lab and shrink them down to roughly the size of a toaster oven so they would be practical to install on a rover.

      While the instrument is complex, MOMA is built around a single, very small mass spectrometer that separates charged atoms and molecules by mass. The basic process for finding Martian organic compounds can be boiled down to two steps: separate organic molecules from the Martian rocks and sediments and give them an electric charge (ionized) so they can be detected and identified by the mass spectrometer. MOMA has two methods for distinguishing as many different kinds of organic molecules as possible. The first method uses an oven to heat a sample--this baking process vaporizes the organic molecules and sends them to a thin column that separates mixtures of compounds into their individual constituents. The compounds sequentially pass into the mass spectrometer, where they are given an electric charge and sorted by mass using electric fields. Each type of molecule has a set of distinct mass-to-electric-charge ratios. The mass spectrometer instrument uses this pattern called a mass spectrum to identify the molecules.

      Some larger organic molecules are fragile and would be broken apart during the high-temperature vaporization in the oven, so MOMA has a second method to find them: It zaps the sample with a laser. Since just a quick burst of laser light is used, it vaporizes some types of larger organic molecules without totally breaking them apart. The laser also gives these molecules an electric charge, so they are sent directly from the sample to the mass spectrometer to be sorted and identified.

      Certain organic molecules have a property that could potentially be used as a strong hint that they were created by life: their handedness, or chirality. Some organic molecules used by life come in two varieties that are mirror images of each other, like your hands. On Earth, life uses all left-handed amino acids and all right-handed sugars to build larger molecules needed for life, like proteins from amino acids and DNA from sugars. Life based on right-handed amino acids (and left-handed sugars) could work, but a mix of right- and left-handed for either will not. This is because these molecules need to come together with the correct orientation, like puzzle pieces, to build other molecules necessary for life to function.

      MOMA is capable of detecting the chirality of organic molecules. If it finds an organic molecule is primarily of the left-hand or right-hand variety (called "homochirality") that can be evidence that life produced the molecules, since non-biological processes tend to make an equal mix of varieties. This is known as a biosignature.

      Mars rovers face another challenge when searching for evidence of life: Contamination. Earth is saturated with life, and scientists have to be very careful that the organic material they detect wasn't simply carried with the instrument from Earth. To ensure this, the MOMA team has taken great care to make sure that the instrument is as free as possible from terrestrial molecules that are signatures of life.

      The ExoMars rover will be the first to explore deep beneath the surface, with a drill capable of taking samples from as deep as two meters (over six feet). This is important because Mars' thin atmosphere and spotty magnetic field offer insufficient protection from space radiation, which can gradually destroy organic molecules left exposed on the surface. However, Martian sediment is an effective shield, and the team expects to find greater abundances of organic molecules in samples from beneath the surface.

      NASA Goddard is developing the mass spectrometer and electronics boxes for MOMA, while LATMOS (Laboratory for Atmospheres, Environments, and Space Observations), Guyancourt, France and Laboratoire Interuniversitaire des Systèmes Atmosphériques (LISA or Interuniversity Laboratory of Atmospheric Systems) Paris, France, make MOMA's gas chromatograph, and the Max Plank Institute for Solar System Research, Gottingen, Germany and Laser Zentrum Hannover, Hannover, Germany, build the instrument's laser, ovens, and tapping (oven sealing) station.

      MOMA recently completed both ESA and NASA pre-delivery reviews that cleared the path for the flight instrument to be delivered to the mission. On Wednesday, May 16, the MOMA mass spectrometer team gathered at Goddard to see off their one-of-a-kind science instrument on the first leg of its journey to Mars: delivery to Thales Alenia Space, in Turin, Italy, where it will be integrated into the rover's analytical laboratory drawer during upcoming mission-level activities this summer. Following subsequent higher-level rover and spacecraft-level integration activities in 2019, the ExoMars Rover is scheduled to launch to Mars in July, 2020 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan."
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 26.05.18 03:45:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.536 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.05.18 03:58:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.537 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.837.020 von Popeye82 am 26.05.18 02:44:46
      http://time.com/5039091/budweiser-beer-mars-space-station/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.05.18 04:47:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.538 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.05.18 05:49:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.539 ()
      The world can’t afford to wait for an energy miracle
      The cost of shifting to clean energy will skyrocket unless we begin making investments and long-term plans to deploy advanced technologies now.
      The findings: New research has found that transitioning to zero carbon electricity will cost 61 percent more by 2050 if we only rely on short-term strategies and existing clean technologies.
      Whyyyyy????????????????????????????????? Such an approach would lock in a less-than-optimal mix of energy sources, ultimately requiring far more energy-generating capacity and supporting infrastructure.
      On the ooooooother hand: If "unicorn technologies" that have been demonstrated but not widely commercialized are deployed along with long-term, systems-wide planning, it could reduce total costs 13 percent by midcentury (see: "Praying for an energy miracle"). Getting there will require public-sector investment and support on the level we've not yet seen.
      http://www.technologyreview.com/the-download/611169/the-worl…
      http://www.technologyreview.com/s/422836/praying-for-an-ener…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 28.05.18 00:07:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.540 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 00:54:17
      Beitrag Nr. 1.541 ()

      https://stockhead.com.au/tech/solar-powered-window-maker-cle…

      http://www.clearvuepv.com/

      " Solar-powered window maker ClearVue spikes 20pc in ASX debut

      Tech

      May 25, 2018 | David Higgins

      Solar-powered glass maker ClearVue Technologies listed on the ASX today at a 20 per cent premium to its issue price.

      The shares (ASX:CPV) debuted at 24c compared to their issue 20c price — but settled back to 21c by Friday’s close.

      Perth-based ClearVue had been aiming to raise up to $6 million — but ended up with $5 million.

      The high-tech glazier — led by founder Victor Rosenberg — has been working for six years on glass panels with built-in photovoltaic cells that can produce up to 30 watts of electricity per square metre.

      The glass features a layer of micro and nano-particles that reflect the sun’s rays towards solar cells embedded near the edge of the glass in a window frame.

      The rays are converted to energy while allowing 70 per cent of light to pass through.

      ClearVue’s photo voltaic windows — developed with experts from Edith Cowan University — are better than competing products because they are more transparent and do not obstruct views through windows, Mr Rosenberg says in the prospectus.


      ClearVue makes glass panels that can generate 30 watts of electricity per square metre.

      “ClearVue aims to preserve glass transparency to maintain building aesthetics while operating at relatively high generation efficiency.”

      The company has no revenue at the moment but hopes to make money in the future by selling the glass through distributors, licensing the technology to glass makers and potentially wholesale deals.

      It’s “finalising steps towards the commercial release of its initial core product” – initially via a contracted manufacturer in China.

      Initially ClearVue is targeting agriculture (particularly glasshouses), commercial and residential construction as well as public amenities (such as bus stops).

      Down the track, the patented technology could be used to power consumer electronics such as mobile phones, tablets and laptops.

      It can also be hooked up to “Internet Of Things” technology to monitor performance.


      ClearVue’s high-tech glass diverts the sun’s rays into solar cells that generate energy. Graphic: ClearVue

      The tech play has been awarded $1.6 million in government grants to build a 300 sq m greenhouse using its technology. ClearVue is contributing about $3 million to the $5 million project and expects to get construction underway in coming months.

      It has also experimented with glass bus shelters where the technology was used to power lighting and signage.

      Bookmark this link for small cap breaking news
      Discuss small cap news in our Facebook group
      Follow us on Facebook or Twitter
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      ClearVue will spend the biggest slice of the IPO proceeds on research aimed at improving electricity generation and reducing the weight and cost of the solar glass.

      The rest is earmarked for staff, marketing, offer expenses, trademark protection and working capital.

      ClearVue’s to-do list includes safety testing, completing the glasshouse, building a factory in China, securing new business and licensing distributors around the world.

      Testing of the glass – which would take about a year – was required before commercial release.

      ClearVue had about $600,000 in the bank before the offer and accrued losses of about $2 million over the past three years.

      The IPO lead manager was Perth-based Ventnor Securities."
      3 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 01:06:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.542 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.843.573 von Popeye82 am 28.05.18 00:54:17
      - Victor Rosenberg
      Am 14.03.2016 veröffentlicht
      When a CearVue panel is exposed to sunlight, the natural visible light passes through, the ultra violet and infrared radiations are deflected to the edge of the glass panel and converted into … electricity.

      It's called 'ClearVue advanced glazing technology' .. and this is how it works: Special micro and nano particles embedded into a polyvinyl butyral interlayer that is fixed between two sheets of clear glass, selectively convert UV radiation to longer wavelengths and deflect infrared light to the edges of the glass, collected by photovoltaic cells.

      Current ClearVue panels can produce 30 watts of electricity per square meter of glass.

      Imagine what large buildings can generate when every window is a ClearVue panel. Imagine the Energy savings when every window is a ClearVue Panel which have Excellent Insulating Properties.

      ClearVue technology's goal is to reach net zero energy consumption and to set the standard for advanced glazing systems in the future.

      ClearVue, the patented, advanced glass technology that converts Ultraviolet (UV) and Infrared (IR) components of sunlight into electricity whilst allowing visible light to pass through.

      +++ for more info please contact us +++ -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 03:29:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.543 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.634.068 von Popeye82 am 26.04.18 12:57:40
      http://bio-gene.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/180528-ASX…
      4 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 04:28:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.544 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.843.648 von Popeye82 am 28.05.18 03:29:01http://storedgrain.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/GSFS-15…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 08:15:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.545 ()
      Ich finde die schlechte Entwicklung für den Planeten Erde wirklich bedenklich. Immer mehr Natur- und Lebensräume werden zerstört. Viele Tierarten stehen vor dem Aussterben. Doch die Menschen interessieren sich mehr für den Fortschritt der Technik, als für den Zustand der Erde.
      2 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 13:59:17
      Beitrag Nr. 1.546 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.844.128 von happykonig am 28.05.18 08:15:47Ja, genau Das ist Es.

      Die Sache ist dass Wir WEDER ohne Das Eine, noch ohne Das Andere (mehr) auskommen.
      Wenn Wir nicht zurück in Die "Steinzeit" wollen, gibt Es bei der "Technik" kein Wirkliches zurück mehr, Meinem Ermessen.
      Ich denke Worum Es für "uns" geht ist dass Wir versuchen müssen eine möglichst, möglichst Gute Symbiose zu finden, zwischen Natur und Technologie.
      Daher kommen sicher Viele "Bewegungen" Der Letzten Jahre auch nicht von Irgendwo, wie Diverse "green" Bewegungen, DIe zur "Bioökonomie" und Derartige Sachen.

      Das ist VERDAMMT schwierig, aber ich denke Diese Symbiose ist vermutlich Das WICHTIGSTE Was Vor uns liegt.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 28.05.18 15:53:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.547 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.844.128 von happykonig am 28.05.18 08:15:47Happykönig

      Was denken Sie denn in Was für Eine Richtung es gehen MÜSSTE??

      Jetzt "einfach" mal unterstellt Wir leb"t"en im WÜNSCH Dir WAS-Land.
      Was wär dann -aus Ihrer Sicht- the right direction???
      Avatar
      schrieb am 29.05.18 22:48:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.548 ()
      Great Barrier Reef






      https://newatlas.com/great-barrier-reef-history-five-deaths/…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 30.05.18 00:03:21
      Beitrag Nr. 1.549 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 30.05.18 01:39:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.550 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 31.05.18 17:45:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1.551 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 31.05.18 20:23:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.552 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.06.18 03:25:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.553 ()
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.06.18 03:37:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.554 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.882.468 von Popeye82 am 01.06.18 03:25:24
      - Stellapps Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
      Am 24.03.2017 veröffentlicht
      Stellapps's Co-Founder Mr. Ravi Shiroor explains about the products offered at the m2m IoT forum, New Delhi. Stellapps won the 1st prize at the event -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.06.18 04:05:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.555 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.06.18 04:45:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.556 ()
      first EVER, completely autonomous machine, for the ecological +economical weeding of row crops, meadows +intercropping cultures


      https://agfundernews.com/ecorobotix-raises-10-7m-series-b.ht…

      http://www.ecorobotix.com/en/

      www.basf.com

      http://www.capagro.fr/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.06.18 05:53:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.557 ()
      this COULD change the future.

      the ONLY robot in the world beeing developed:eek::eek: , to work:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek: , with gracing livestock






      -ABCTVCatalyst
      Am 14.03.2018 veröffentlicht
      This could be the future of farming. SwagBot is the first prototype of a robot to do cattle work 24/7 in all terrain and all weather, with the aim of helping Aussie farmers tackle some of their biggest challenges. Will this change the way we’ve been farming for generations?

      Watch Catalyst on ABC iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/cata...

      SUBSCRIBE: http://ab.co/CatalystYouTube

      About Catalyst:
      Catalyst is Australia's flagship science documentary program, showcasing Australian and international stories that impact us all. With our exciting mix of science genres, presented by top scientists and experts, viewers are exposed to extraordinary topics, discoveries, observations, and philosophies that shape our world. The viewer will be left inspired, activated, and in awe of this extraordinary planet.

      Connect with other Catalyst fans:
      Visit the Catalyst website: http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst
      Like Catalyst on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ABCCatalyst
      Follow Catalyst on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ABCcatalyst

      This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation YouTube channel.
      ********
      Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC's Online Conditions of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). -
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 01.06.18 06:05:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.558 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.882.522 von Popeye82 am 01.06.18 05:53:22we live in a CHANGING world:eek::eek::mad::mad::mad:






      - CNH INDUSTRIAL
      Am 30.08.2016 veröffentlicht
      We live in a changing world and farming is changing with it. Our growing population and a greater environmental awareness means farmers need to produce more food more sustainably from the same amount of land. It’s ultimately technology that will make the difference – and CNH Industrial is at the forefront of this change.

      We set out to take technology in a different direction that would allow farmers to integrate new technology into existing fleets and give them access to real time data wherever they are. We believe this technology will, in the future, change the face of farming for the benefit of all.

      This concept autonomous tractor, has been conceived by CNH Industrial’s innovation team, is truly independent and driverless.

      Filmed entirely on location on a working farm in Kentucky, USA in June 2016. All live footage is original and without CGI enhancements.

      For more information please visit: http://media.cnhindustrial.com/EMEA -
      https://media.cnhindustrial.com/EMEA
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.06.18 02:22:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.559 ()
      Living forever?
      ; Life-extending bioscience aims @dogs, now(humans later)









      http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/05/31/the-always-…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 04.06.18 09:43:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.560 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.837.077 von Popeye82 am 26.05.18 05:49:20
      https://reneweconomy.com.au/record-year-solar-renewables-sti…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 05.06.18 04:58:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.561 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 05.06.18 05:16:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.562 ()
      Particle detected:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek: , that SHOULDn't Exist; Scientists have produced the firmest evidence yet of so-called sterile neutrinos, mysterious particles that pass through matter, without interacting with it at all

      - The surface facility for the IceCube experiment, which is located under nearly 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) of ice in Antarctica. IceCube suggests ghostly neutrinos don't exist, buuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuut a new experiment says they do.
      Credit: Courtesy of IceCube Neutrino Observatory -
      http://www.livescience.com/62721-sterile-neutrino-detected-f…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 05.06.18 23:58:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.563 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.06.18 04:56:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.564 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.06.18 05:49:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.565 ()
      LIBERATE humanity, from politicians :):):):):)







      Floating cities become a REALITY(2022)

      https://smallcaps.com.au/floating-cities-become-reality-2022…

      http://www.seasteading.org/f

      "The world's first floating nation is set to be built in the next few years by the Seasteading Institute, which hopes to 'liberate humanity from politicians'.


      Living on the ocean is a dream that has been vividly described in sci-fi Hollywood movies, but now, it could become a reality courtesy of a unique pilot program that’s being taken seriously by officials in French Polynesia including current President Edouard Fritch.

      The concept is being manufactured by a consortium of both public and private entities including Blue Frontiers and The Seasteading Institute, a non-profit think-tank that is pushing for floating societies to become a reality.

      One of its most high-profile backers is billionaire PayPal founder Peter Thiel.


      PayPal founders Peter Thiel and Elon Musk.

      French Polynesia is serving as the project’s first port of call, although its organisers hope to see other jurisdictions taking up the call towards “seavilization”. Since its inception in 2017, Blue Frontiers has considered various sites around the world and hopes to see other countries following French Polynesia’s lead.

      The cluster of islands is officially deemed as an “overseas country” by its political superintendent (France), comprising of 118 dispersed islands and atolls stretching over more than 2,000 kilometres in the middle of the South Pacific Ocean.

      Its current government has approved plans for a private consortium to build around 300 floating homes at a cost of around US$50 million, but not only that, the initiative is also offering cryptocurrency-powered political sovereignty for all would-be residents.

      A bit like Hollywood’s Waterworld only a lot more orderly and with far better facilities.


      Floating city nation

      Under the current proposal, Blue Frontiers and The Seasteading Institute are looking to build a newly-made island that would make premium-priced homes available within an entirely new “economic ecosystem” based on a transparent and fairly distributed cryptocurrency called Varyon.

      “A core structural feature of current models of government is centralization. Too much centralized authority leads to inefficient bureaucracies and representatives disconnected from the people they are meant to serve. Given a suitable technological solution, governments are ripe for decentralization. That technological solution is seasteading”, says Blue Frontiers.

      The man-made island would also become part of a buoyant Specialized Economic Zone (SEZ) that is entirely self-governing and not subject to any particular government’s laws, including the current regional adjudicator, France.

      The current plan is to use the proceeds of Varyon’s launch and token sales to expand its ecosystem and create “SeaZones and seasteads” that only accept Varyon for various products and services, including new homes built within floating cities.

      Powering up, for ocean living

      Blue Frontiers has said it intends to power the floating city with large solar panels and wind turbines, but also, is looking to implement new environmentally-friendly technologies to ensure its vision is suitably powered and is able to provide high-end creature comforts for its inhabitants.

      Its creators say that if the concept is successful, it could hail a wider implementation of similar ventures in other parts of the world.

      The overall cost towards the project is estimated to be around $50 million with the island expected to be ready for inhabitation by the end of 2022.



      Blue Frontiers Seasteading Institute ocean living

      It has secured funding through the philanthropic donations via the Seasteading Institute and the Blue Frontiers, the organizations driving this initiative and managing the sale of the Varyon cryptocurrency tokens.

      In the long run, the team behind the initiative envisions hundreds of similar self-governing cryptocurrency-powered floating communities that can “float to other locations” with little notice, thereby “removing government monopolies on the space where citizens live and businesses conduct their commercial activities.”

      Administrative hot water

      The Seasteading Institute signed a memorandum of understanding with the government of French Polynesia last year and has tasked Blue Frontiers to complete a “set of environmental, economic, and legal studies” regarding the development of its envisaged city in French Polynesia.

      The ocean-farer also says that the project still requires a “special regulatory framework granting substantial autonomy.”

      All indications suggest the consortium will not face much opposition given the investment, regional job creation (not to mention additional tourism) the venture is likely to generate.

      The project developers have picked French Polynesia because it is a highly pristine and exotic region, but from in a more pragmatic sense, it is a region where a significant amount of land is resting on coral and could “disappear with rising sea levels,” according to scientific research cited by Blue Frontiers.


      The Seasteading Institute.

      According to Blue Frontiers, “overcrowded urban environments need to safely and sustainably expand onto water, and millions of people globally are harshly affected by sea level rise today, with many more crippled by it tomorrow.”

      The sea-steading developer also claims that all its “ecological floating habitats” are specially designed to be tsunami-proof and are completely immune to rising sea levels.

      As well as offering a home for the displaced, the self-contained islands are designed to function as business centres that are beyond the influence of government regulation.

      “This means there is stability, outside of fluctuating geopolitical influences, trade issues and currency fluctuations — it’s the perfect incubator,” says Blue Frontiers researcher and self-styled “seavangelesse” Ms Nathalie Mezza-Garcia.

      The University of Warwick researcher has published several peer-reviewed scientific papers including ‘Towards a World without Nation-States’ in 2014 and ‘Anarchy and Complexity’ in 2016.

      The floating island project in French Polynesia is her most sincere and practical anti-establishment concept, whereby governments merely act as service providers while allowing floating communities to self-govern without hindrance.

      Ms Mezza-Garcia says there is plenty of evidence to suggest an egalitarian concept would function in practice and would facilitate a truly sovereign method of self-governance. “If you don’t want to live under a particular government, people will be able to just take their house and float away to another island,” says Ms Mezza-Garcia.

      The floating city project is currently conducting local engagement, community building, and site studies with construction likely to commence shortly thereafter for the project to meet its current deadline date of 2022."
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.06.18 06:08:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.566 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.917.010 von Popeye82 am 06.06.18 05:49:31http://www.seasteading.org/floating-city-project/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.06.18 07:57:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.567 ()
      first EVER





      Schuhe:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek: , aus Kaugummi







      - Publicis One Nederland
      Am 19.04.2018 veröffentlicht
      The first shoe ever made from chewing gum. The soles of these shoes are made from recycled chewing gum taken from the streets of Amsterdam. In the Netherlands 1.5 million kilos of gum ends up on the street every year. Making it the second most common litter after cigarettes. By buying these shoes you contribute to the solution, by wearing them you show your support.

      Get yours at www.gumshoe.amsterdam



      Agency: Publicis One Netherlands
      Music: Good Sounds -
      http://www.ingenieur.de/technik/fachbereiche/umwelt/in-amste…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 06.06.18 08:24:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.568 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.917.496 von Popeye82 am 06.06.18 07:57:52world's FIRST

      http://gumdropltd.com/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.06.18 19:07:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.569 ()
      groundBREAKING, sustainable, technology, that enables greenhouses to increase crop productivity, using power derived from their own recycled vegetable mass, or external organic waste streams

      http://www.enesys.com.au/enesys-sustainable-technology-enabl…

      http://www.enesys.com.au/about-us/



      http://www.enesys.com.au/about-us/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 07.06.18 20:56:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.570 ()
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 05:56:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.571 ()
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 10:46:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.572 ()
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 11:02:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.573 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.843.573 von Popeye82 am 28.05.18 00:54:17POTENTIALLY revolutionising (building) industry practice


      https://reneweconomy.com.au/clearvue-solar-windows-tapped-au…
      http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20180607/pdf/43vm15s2ss887f.pdf
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 12:22:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.574 ()
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 13:20:45
      Beitrag Nr. 1.575 ()

      - Daily Mail
      Am 07.06.2018 veröffentlicht
      NASA’s Curiosity rover has uncovered signatures of an environment on the red plant that may once have been habitable. In two separate studies on data collected by the Mars rover over the last few years, scientists have identified an abundant source of organic matter in the ancient soil, and traced some of the planet’s atmospheric methane to its roots. The findings could help to guide the search for ancient microbial life and improve our understanding of seasonal processes on Mars. -
      http://www.theguardian.com/science/2018/jun/07/nasa-mars-rov…
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-5818179/Break…
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      schrieb am 08.06.18 13:44:37
      Beitrag Nr. 1.576 ()
      Battery REVOLUTION breakTHROUGH







      http://www.technologyreview.com/s/610792/this-battery-advanc…

      https://silanano.com/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.06.18 11:48:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.577 ()
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      schrieb am 09.06.18 15:51:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.578 ()
      :):):)



      energy use must NOT destroy civilisation


      https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-44424572
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 10:03:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.579 ()
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 17:32:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.580 ()
      SELF-healing concrete

      -BinghamtonUniversity
      Am 17.01.2018 veröffentlicht
      A new self-healing fungi concrete, co-developed by researchers at Binghamton University, State University of New York, could help repair cracks in aging concrete permanently, and help save America’s crumbling infrastructure.

      http://www.binghamton.edu -
      http://www.innovationtoronto.com/2018/06/self-healing-concre…
      http://www.binghamton.edu/news/story/938/using-fungi-to-fix-…
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 18:08:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.581 ()
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 21:45:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.582 ()
      Urban Mining of E-Waste is Becoming More Cost-Effective Than Virgin Mining, by

      http://www.innovationtoronto.com/2018/04/urban-mining-of-e%e…
      http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/pressroom/newsreleases/201…
      http://www.proactiveinvestors.com/companies/stocktube/9473/m…

      "Electronic waste — including discarded televisions, computers and mobile phones — is one of the fastest-growing waste categories worldwide.

      For years, recyclers have gleaned usable parts, including metals, from this waste stream. That makes sense from a sustainability perspective, but it’s been unclear whether it’s reasonable from an economic viewpoint. Now researchers report in ACS’ journal Environmental Science & Technology that recovering gold, copper and other metals from e-waste is cheaper than obtaining these metals from mines.

      Projections indicate that about 50 million tons of e-waste will be discarded around the world in 2018, according to the United Nations’ Global E-waste Monitor report. This type of waste contains a surprising amount of metal. For example, a typical cathode-ray tube TV contains almost a pound of copper and more than half a pound of aluminum, though it only holds about 0.02 ounces of gold. Xianlai Zeng, John A. Mathews and Jinhui Li obtained data from eight recycling companies in China to calculate the cost for extracting such metals from e-waste, a practice known as “urban mining.” Expenses included the costs for waste collection, labor, energy, material and transportation, as well as capital costs for the recyclers’ equipment and buildings. These expenses are offset by government subsidies and by revenue from selling recovered materials and components. The researchers conclude that with these offsets, it costs 13 times more to obtain these metals from ore than from urban mining. The researchers also draw implications for the economic prospects of urban mining as an alternative to virgin mining of ores, based on the “circular economy,” or recirculation of resources......................................................"
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 22:15:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.583 ()

      -Proactive Investors Stocktube
      Am 06.06.2018 veröffentlicht
      Marrone Bio Innovations Inc (NASDAQ:MBII) CEO Pam Marrone tells Proactive Investors why even conventional growers are using the company's organic pest control.

      "We look for large influential growers and we do a demonstration on their farm," said Marrone.

      Growers are able to compare a block of area using their traditional methods to an area using Marrone Bio's products.

      While organic food farmers are drawn to natural pesticides, the crop yield results have piqued the interest of traditional farmers as well. -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 10.06.18 23:07:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.584 ()


      http://www.igb.illinois.edu/article/scientists-boost-crop-pr…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 10.06.18 23:21:13
      Beitrag Nr. 1.585 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.954.288 von Popeye82 am 10.06.18 23:07:54
      http://www.openaccessgovernment.org/agricultural-systems/464…
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      schrieb am 11.06.18 11:21:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.586 ()
      world’s FIRST, bioplastic concept fridge

      http://www.electroluxgroup.com/en/electrolux-builds-the-worl…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.06.18 12:11:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.587 ()

      https://ilbioeconomista.com/2018/06/11/an-interview-with-vir…

      "An interview with Virginia Klausmeier, CEO Sylvatex “Bio-based is leading the way towards more sustainable chemicals and processes”
      11 June 2018Il Bioeconomista


      Virginia Klausmeier

      “The future of the chemical industry is the global migration to chemicals and chemical processes that improve the environmental impact of chemicals and reduce the negative health effects associated with chemicals and their production”. To say it in this exclusive interview with Il Bioeconomista is Virginia Klausmeier, founder and CEO of Sylvatex, the California-based company which has developed a renewable nano-chemistry platform that has applications in solutions for industry processing, materials stability, and fuels.

      Interview by Mario Bonaccorso

      Mrs Klausmeier, could you explain to us what is the main business of Sylvatex?

      Sylvatex upcycles low value plant-based inputs into high-value alternatives to petrochemicals. Our product platform – MicroX – replaces universal petroleum based emulsions with a technically superior, low cost and non-toxic system. The Product platform – MicroX – are nanoparticles made of plant materials, and engineered systems that manipulate chemicals, fabricate materials and structures, produce energy and enhance our environment by providing safer and better solutions. Sylvatex’s nanoparticle technology enables one to carry molecules into hydrophobic and hydrophilic environments that they would not normally have access to and also act a nano-reactor system to tailor desired targeted outcomes. Our IP-protected platform and growing database addresses multiple billion-dollar markets – from next-generation batteries materials, cleaning agents, fragrances to fuels while significantly reducing the toxic waste and carbon from industrial applications.

      What is the bioeconomy from your point of view?

      The bioeconomy is ecosystem of researchers, sciences and technology to convert sustainable, renewable biomass-based resources into high value added products to replace industrial processes that are carbon intensive, wasteful and environmentally harsh. The bioeconomy is transitioning the global markets from the traditional carbon sources of petroleum to more renewable energy source and cleaner air for the future.

      As far as you’re concerned, is the future of the chemical industry really bio-based?

      The future of the chemical industry is the global migration to chemicals and chemical processes that improve the environmental impact of chemicals and reduce the negative health effects associated with chemicals and their production. The industry is clearly moving to more sustainable solutions, and though bio-based may not be the only solution, it is leading the way towards more sustainable and environmentally friendly chemicals and processes. Greener chemistry practices in general are picking up substantially due to increased regulations and the industry is rapidly changing as an effect.

      What do you think are the most important milestones the green chemical industry must achieve in the next 5 years?

      The most important milestones the green chemistry industry must achieve in the next 5 years are:

      1) Increased use of renewable feedstocks
      2) Designed processes for energy efficiency
      3) Development and implementation of environmentally safe solvents
      4) Design and implementation of less hazardous chemical syntheses
      5) Chemicals designed to have low environmental impact with improved degrability


      Bioeconomy and circular economy are two increasingly prevalent economic paradigms, but that public opinion still does not understand. How can stakeholders and authorities better communicate the benefits of bio-based products compared to those of fossil origin?

      This is tough question… I think that using consumer and everyday products that people know and understand is a start then focusing on chemical intermediates or processes that happen on up the supply chain.

      For example, we know we can use MicroX as an alternative to petroleum based diesel fuel, and since everyone knows diesel fuel create high tailpipe emissions when we say we can cut the black soot by 50% and have a fuel that is ~65% less carbon intense that is something people can understand…it is a cleaner burner, greener fuel without affecting you, the consumers, pocket book. On the other hand other applications that are to substitute out toxic material for MicroX in the process of making cathode material for lithium ion batteries…this application is a little harder to tangibilize to the everyday person how it will positively change the world.

      Sylvatex and Valicor Inc. have recently entered into a joint development agreement. Could you give us further details regarding this JDA?

      Both Trucent, formerly known as Valicor, and Sylvatex see that there is great value to upscaling low cost biomaterials into higher valuable products. The partnership grew out of the goal to create a low capital process that could be modular and easily bolt onto existing biofereinly assets. The current JDA will oversee the development, construction, and commercialization of Sylvatex’s “MicroXTM” technology, converting distillers corn oil (DCO) and other plant-based oil feedstocks into Sylvatex’s proprietary MicroX renewable blendstock. The JDA will also accelerate commercial scale engineering and expedite early market sales of the MicroX blendstock. Sylvatex and Trucent “share the commitment” to waste resource recovery and upcycling of biomaterials to create valuable solutions for industry. The company’s say that the partnership will benefit both the environment and stakeholders by repurposing materials, maximizing green chemistry processing by allowing for substantially lower production costs, and significantly reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Both Sylvatex and Trucent expect to deploy this technology in partnership with ethanol producers as a way to increase the value of co- products and to provide diversification into other fuels and chemical markets. Trucent specialises in industrial uid reclamation and has developed programs to improve the process, yield and value of ethanol co-products including a proprietary protein platform and Corn Oil Separation System.

      What are the next steps your company is planning to take?

      The next step is to execute on the current JDA with Trucent to scale up the process and start making early market sales or MicroXTM. In parallel, we are also working toward expanding our platform technology to broader market opportunities in speciality chemicals and working with industry partnership to expedite these growing applications such as, processing material for li-ion batteries, animal nutrition, consumer products and others to market."
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.06.18 12:48:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.588 ()
      new water recovery technology COULD be a great solution, to address the global water crisis





      http://news.mit.edu/2018/new-system-recovers-fresh-water-pow…
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      schrieb am 11.06.18 13:11:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.589 ()
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      schrieb am 11.06.18 20:50:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.590 ()
      8th world wonder







      World's FIRST, Commercial, Waste Gas to Ethanol Plant, now in Operation; REVOLUTIONIZING the way the world thinks, about (waste) carbon(by treating it as an opportunity(insteaaaaad of a liability))

      http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/06/10/worlds-firs…

      http://www.lanzatech.com/
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 11.06.18 23:56:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.591 ()
      sun NOT shine @night





      Avatar
      schrieb am 12.06.18 00:10:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.592 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 12.06.18 04:29:00
      Beitrag Nr. 1.593 ()
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      schrieb am 12.06.18 08:32:26
      Beitrag Nr. 1.594 ()
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      schrieb am 12.06.18 21:48:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.595 ()
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      schrieb am 13.06.18 14:03:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.596 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.961.254 von Popeye82 am 11.06.18 20:50:29world’s FIRST, commercial facility converting industrial emissions to sustainable ethanol

      https://ilbioeconomista.com/2018/06/13/lanzatech-and-shougan…
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      schrieb am 13.06.18 21:18:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.597 ()
      Innovate444444444444444444444444Climate






      https://makronom.de/klimaschutz-und-profit-sind-keine-gegens…
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      schrieb am 14.06.18 06:34:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.598 ()
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      schrieb am 14.06.18 07:15:21
      Beitrag Nr. 1.599 ()
      Canadian breakTHROUGH, on scrubbing CO2 from the air; Industrial scale atmospheric carbon capture ---->NOW<---- viable(Kohlendioxid aus der Luft zu filtern ist billiger. Als angenommen. Neue Technik lässt auf Kosten von <100 Dollar/Tonne HOFFEN.)


      http://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/6/breakthrough-scrubbi…

      http://www.derstandard.de/story/2000081386595/kohlendioxid-a…

      http://carbonengineering.com/
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 14.06.18 07:28:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.600 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 14.06.18 07:41:16
      Beitrag Nr. 1.601 ()
      DISRUPTIVE, REVOLUTIONARY (low-)cost, (low-)carbon Radio Frequency(RF) EOR technology, for in situ oil sands +heavy oil production(HAS the potential to save billions of dollars in oil sands production costs, by reducing both -capital and operating costs, by @least 50 percent. RF XL offers immediate and significant improvements in GHG emissions, water use, land use, and does not require the use of solvents. As an electrically driven process, RF XL can eventually provide a clear pathway to zero GHG emissions production. Of heavy oil, and oil sands.)


      http://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/6/radio-frequency-oils…

      http://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/acceleware-successful-i…

      http://www.acceleware.com/about-acceleware

      http://www.acceleware.com/
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 14.06.18 08:08:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.602 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.981.993 von Popeye82 am 14.06.18 07:41:16
      - AccelewareLtd
      Am 19.11.2012 veröffentlicht
      RF Heating using electromagnetic energy describes the technology of heating of bitumen and/or heavy oil in oil-sand mediums using radio frequency (electromagnetic) energy. Radio frequency heating (RF heating or also RF-MW heating) uses antennas or electrodes to heat the buried formation. This enables a quick and efficient heating of hydrocarbons by coupling antennas into the reservoir. -




      -Jeff Russell
      Am 06.12.2017 veröffentlicht
      Acceleware Ltd - Highlighting the company and potential returns it offers. They are developing a Radio Frequency technology to extract bitumen in an environmentally conscious manner.

      AXE.V TSX Venture Ticker Symbol
      ACWRF.US OTC USA Ticker Symbol

      Corporate Presentation - https://www.acceleware.com/sites/all/...

      Geoff Clark on BNN - https://www.bnn.ca/commodities/video/...

      SDTC Project Funding - https://www.sdtc.ca/en/portfolio/proj... -
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      schrieb am 14.06.18 08:53:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.603 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.981.783 von Popeye82 am 14.06.18 07:15:21Die ARBEITEN wooooooohl






      - Carbon Engineering Ltd.
      Am 15.02.2018 veröffentlicht
      This video explains CE's "air to fuels" technology, which uses clean electricity to convert captured atmospheric CO2 and water into liquid transportation fuels. CE is commercializing this technology to produce large volumes of fuel to help displace crude oil and GHG emissions from transportation. -












      - The Globe and Mail
      Am 08.01.2016 veröffentlicht
      The Globe and Mail's Ivan Semeniuk looks at how a Canadian company, Carbon Engineering, wants to take carbon capture technologies one step further by turning that carbon into fuel -




      - Carbon Engineering Ltd.
      Am 16.02.2012 veröffentlicht
      This video explains the rationale and motivation behind direct capture of CO2 from the atmosphere (air capture), the air capture process itself, and what Carbon Engineering is doing to commercialize air capture in today's economy. (http://www.carbonengineering.com) -
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 05:17:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.604 ()
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 08:15:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.605 ()
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 10:25:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.606 ()
      REVOLUTIONARY, world's FIRST (commercial-scale) greenhouse gas-to-AirCarbon manufacturing facility

      http://www.newlight.com/technology/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.06.18 13:11:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.607 ()
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 14:18:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.608 ()
      world-FIRST, patented, Australian Carbon REVOLUTION technology


      http://www.calix.com.au/cfc_technology.html

      http://www.calix.com.au/
      3 Antworten
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 17:20:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.609 ()




      www.adomanielectric.com
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 19:04:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.610 ()
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      schrieb am 15.06.18 23:10:43
      Beitrag Nr. 1.611 ()
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      schrieb am 16.06.18 01:53:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.612 ()
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      schrieb am 16.06.18 19:35:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.613 ()
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      schrieb am 17.06.18 08:34:15
      Beitrag Nr. 1.614 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.962.538 von Popeye82 am 12.06.18 00:10:57polish approval for SUPERFuel





















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      schrieb am 18.06.18 14:04:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.615 ()
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      schrieb am 18.06.18 16:45:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.616 ()
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      schrieb am 18.06.18 23:26:21
      Beitrag Nr. 1.617 ()
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 19.06.18 12:01:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.618 ()
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      schrieb am 19.06.18 12:26:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.619 ()
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      schrieb am 19.06.18 14:25:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.620 ()
      EU TRANSforms energy sector, G20 goes for gas, build or buy batteries? Energy Charter Evil Empire?
      www.internet.com

      "Energy Post Weekly brings you the bottom-line on European and international energy affairs from Energy Post's editor-in-chief Karel Beckman and EU correspondent Sonja van Renssen in Brussels. Sign up here for a free trial

      IN KAREL BECKMAN’S ENERGY WATCH:

      Many steps back, few forward as we move into the New Gas World

      BP: optimistic or propagandistic?
      G20's dash for gas
      Failure of international climate policy

      What else can we do? Suck CO2 out of the sky? Store it underground?

      Is direct air capture feasible after all?
      CO2 can be stored "safely and effectively"

      Bill Gates makes a small bet on energy storage – China a large one

      Billionaires of Breakthrough invest (peanuts) in storage
      Chinese CATL to become world's biggest battery builder (welcome another Chinese billionaire)

      Should Europe buy or build batteries? Or have the Asians build batteries in Europe?

      Plans for building EV battery factories in Europe (almost all Asian companies)
      How to compete in energy storage
      Advances in EV batteries

      IN BRUSSELS INSIDER THIS WEEK

      EU transforms the European energy sector

      There is much more to the newly agreed Renewables Directive than the 32% target: it will transform European energy markets (read how)

      Exclusive interview Jean-Marc Leroy, President of Gas Infrastructure Europe: “Green gas is paramount for us, but we are still in experimentation phase”

      IN ENERGY POST EXPRESS

      More trouble for the Energiewende as utilities call for rapid coal phase out and citizens oppose wind farms

      Oil stocks: from rock-solid blue chips to speculative investment

      Is the Energy Charter Treaty the Dark Lord of the energy sector?

      Renewables: Innogy expands in U.S., EnBW in France, Norway mulls offshore wind expansion"
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      schrieb am 20.06.18 17:41:40
      Beitrag Nr. 1.621 ()
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      schrieb am 20.06.18 18:32:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.622 ()
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      schrieb am 20.06.18 20:10:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1.623 ()
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      schrieb am 20.06.18 20:22:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.624 ()
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      schrieb am 20.06.18 21:20:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.625 ()
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      schrieb am 21.06.18 03:56:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.626 ()
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      schrieb am 21.06.18 04:09:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.627 ()
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      schrieb am 21.06.18 04:33:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.628 ()

      http://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/6/climate-czar-advises…

      http://www.un.org/

      "Climate czar advises oil executives to reinvest profits in renewable technologies:):):)
      By Bloomberg |
      June 20, 2018, 3:38 p.m. |
      Share:

      Image: JWN

      The world’s biggest crude exporters need to support the transition away from oil or prepare for growing climate-induced destabilization that could wreck their markets, the United Nation’s top environment official said.

      “If we do not pay attention to this transition, their business is also going to suffer,” Patricia Espinosa said in an interview with Bloomberg News at a seminar ahead of an Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries meeting in Vienna. “The conversation here is a lot about business and price. Very few people talk about sustainability.”

      Scientists predict floods, famines and superstorms will become more frequent unless the world keeps temperature rises well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) this century. The risks posed by runaway climate change have mobilized trillions of dollars of investments by companies and economies transitioning to renewable energy, electric transport and more efficient technologies.

      Oil majors including Total SA and Royal Dutch Shell Plc have increasingly shown interest in diversifying investments away from fossil fuels and toward greener energy.

      Gain access to the latest asset and corporate valuations, M&A; deals, corporate financials, operating data and refinery projects with Evaluate Energy's Global Oil & Gas Database.
      Find out more

      “This is about the survival of their business and what are they going to do,” said Espinosa, the Mexican diplomat who opened talks with OPEC when she became executive secretary of the UN’s Framework Convention on Climate Change in 2013. “They need markets and resiliency and that requires attention to climate change.”

      Espinosa said OPEC ministers and oil executives had mixed reactions to her speech. She’s encouraging oil producers to begin reinvesting their vast profits in renewable technologies as a hedge against climate risks.

      “They need economies that are thriving and countries that are growing for business to work,” Espinosa said. “That will not happen if we do not pay attention to climate change. We will have global destabilization, crisis everywhere.”

      © 2018 Bloomberg L.P"
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      schrieb am 21.06.18 05:42:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.629 ()
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      schrieb am 21.06.18 16:31:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.630 ()
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      schrieb am 22.06.18 02:12:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.631 ()
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      schrieb am 22.06.18 06:24:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.632 ()
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      schrieb am 22.06.18 18:11:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.633 ()
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      schrieb am 22.06.18 21:05:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.634 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.013.326 von Popeye82 am 18.06.18 23:26:21
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      schrieb am 25.06.18 15:22:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.635 ()
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      schrieb am 26.06.18 12:20:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.636 ()
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      schrieb am 27.06.18 16:29:00
      Beitrag Nr. 1.637 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.843.573 von Popeye82 am 28.05.18 00:54:17world's FIRST technology design breakTHROUGH; PARADIGM shift, in the way glass will be used in building construction, automobiles, agriculture +specialty products

      http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20180627/pdf/43w2htrzjqs40m.pdf



      http://www.clearvuepv.com/
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 13:39:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.638 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.994.581 von Popeye82 am 15.06.18 14:18:46
      https://stockhead.com.au/tech/ipo-watch-sewer-saviour-calix-…




      http://www.calix.com.au/
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 13:51:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.639 ()
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 17:29:50
      Beitrag Nr. 1.640 ()

      http://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/6/ualberta-researchers…
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 18:04:17
      Beitrag Nr. 1.641 ()
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 19:55:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.642 ()
      FIRST Alien 'Water World', with Complex Organics

      http://www.space.com/41005-saturn-moon-enceladus-complex-org…
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 23:17:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.643 ()
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      schrieb am 28.06.18 23:57:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.644 ()
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 01:13:16
      Beitrag Nr. 1.645 ()
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 10:32:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.646 ()

      https://reneweconomy.com.au/tesla-batteries-arrive-worlds-fi…

      "The first Tesla Powerpack batteries have arrived on site in north Queensland, ready to be installed at what will be the world’s first grid-connected project combining large scale wind, solar and battery storage.


      The first stage of the Kennedy Energy Hub will comprise 43.5MW of wind, 15MW of solar and 4MWh of the Tesla Powerpack 100kWh batteries, which arrived on site earlier this month.

      Construction is due to be completed later this year, and will be the second leading battery storage project in Queensland, following the connection late last year of the Lakeland solar and battery project – the first to connect to a grid in Australia – at Cooktown further to the north.

      For Tesla, it is the third major big battery storage project in Australia, following the ground-breaking and world’s largest battery at what is known as the Hornsdale Power Reserve, next to the Hornsdale wind farm, and the 20MW/50MWh battery now being installed at the Ganawarra solar farm in Victoria.

      Windlab CEO Roger Price says the Kennedy Energy Hub – located between Townsville and Mt Isa – will demonstrate the effectiveness of wind and solar working together, and how battery storage can play a critical role in smoothing out and shifting supply.

      Price says the wind and solar at Kennedy are highly complimentary.

      “Of course, you get solar in the middle of the day, the wind resource picks up as the sun starts to set, blows through night, then then continues until after the sun rises, where it drops off,” he told the Large Scale Solar and Storage conference in Sydney this week.

      Price says that the battery will help the project more effectively “clip the peak”, and dispatch at time of high demand. At Kennedy, it will also help in curtailment issues.

      The site is currently limited to a 50MW connection point, potentially leading to around 3 per cent curtailment, and so the decision to “stuff” any surplus into the battery and release it at other times.

      Price says that a bigger battery may be appropriate, but the economics of battery storage were still “marginal”, although “getting better quickly”. The Tesla batteries will be able to participate in the FCAS market, as the Tesla big battery in South Australia has done.

      While the first stage of the Kennedy Energy Hub is world-leading, the potential of the overall project is truly breathtaking.

      Windlab has previously talked of its plans for “Big Kennedy”, potentially combining 600MW of wind and 600MW of solar, which along with storage would be able to deliver “baseload” renewables at a far lower price than any new coal-fired generator that some have called for.

      Price says that the area has potential for 2GW of wind energy, at a very high capacity factor of around 45 per cent – which he notes does not blow or produce at the same time as wind resources in South Australia and Victoria.

      Those plans will depend on new network infrastructure, but Price says it will be critical to help Queensland meet its 50 per cent renewable energy target by 2030."
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 14:35:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.647 ()
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 14:52:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.648 ()
      Lecker Strom

      http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/Lecker-Strom-Bakterie…

      https://shop.heise.de/zeitschriften/technology-review/magazi…

      "Lecker Strom: Mikroorganismen als Elektronenatmer und Elektronenfresser
      25.06.2018 07:46 Uhr Nike Heinen
      vorlesen
      Lecker Strom

      Das Bakterium Shewanella oneidensis (hier eine Illustration) treibt bei Nahrungsmangel seinen Stoffwechsel mit Elektronen an.

      (Bild: Science Photo Library / Ella Maru Studio)

      Einige Mikroorganismen ernähren sich von Strom oder verwandeln Rohstoffe in Elektrizität. Das wollen sich Forscher zunutze machen.
      Strom-Tarifvergleich
      Anzeige
      Postleitzahl
      Verbrauch

      ein Service von

      Bald könnten Mikroorganismen die Kraftwerke der ganzen Menschheit sein. Denn einige von ihnen gehen so selbstverständlich mit Strom um wie unsereins mit Atemluft und Brötchen. Mal erzeugen die stäbchenförmigen Einzeller bei ihrem Stoffwechsel Strom, atmen ihn also ab wie Menschen das Kohlendioxid. Mal fressen sie ihn buchstäblich und machen daraus energiereiche Moleküle, berichtet Technology Review in seiner Juli-Ausgabe, die jetzt im gut sortierten Zeitschriftenhandel sowie online erhältlich ist.

      "Von den Elektronenatmern wissen wir erst seit etwa einem Jahrzehnt, die Elektronenfresser sind sogar erst seit wenigen Jahren bekannt", sagt Alfred Spormann, Umweltmikrobiologe an der Stanford University in Kalifornien. Spormann gehört zu den Pionieren eines ganz neuen Forschungsfeldes: der Elektromikrobiologie. Er hat viele dieser Phänomene selbst entdeckt, versucht jetzt zu verstehen, welches molekulare Rüstzeug diese Mikroorganismen zu solchen Stromjongleuren macht – und wie sie sich für ein sauberes Energiesystem nutzen lassen.
      Elektronenströme

      Im molekularen Maßstab betrachtet, besteht Strom aus wandernden Elektronen. Solche Elektronenströme sind – so erstaunlich es zunächst klingt – der Motor des Lebens: Mit ihnen erzeugen alle lebenden Zellen in ihrem Inneren Energie. Dabei werden mehrere elektronenaffine Moleküle hintereinandergeschaltet. Bei jedem Sprung eines Elektrons von Molekül zu Molekül wird Energie frei. Zellen von Pflanzen und Tieren lösen zum Beispiel zur Energiegewinnung Elektronen aus Zuckermolekülen heraus und reichen sie über so eine Elektronentransportkette an Sauerstoff weiter.

      Bis vor Kurzem hielt man es für unmöglich, dass Organismen diese Elektronen auch mit ihrer Umgebung austauschen. Genau das aber können jene Mikroorganismen, für die sich die Elektromikrobiologie interessiert. Dazu besitzen sie zum Beispiel sogenannte Nanowires. Diese Kabel im Miniformat bestehen aus Zellmembranen, die dicht mit Elektronentransport-Proteinen besetzt sind. Entlang der Membran werden die negativ geladenen Elektronen weitergereicht, bis sie auf positiv geladenen Metall-Ionen im umgebenden Gestein landen.
      Elektromikroben

      Alle bisher bekannten Elektromikroben stammen aus den ersten Tagen des Lebens. Damals gab es in der Erdatmosphäre noch keinen Sauerstoff als allzeit bereiten Elektronenabnehmer. Also mussten sich die ersten Lebewesen etwas anderes einfallen lassen. So wie Shewanella oneidensis: Die Mikroorganismen leben heute im Meeresboden, wo, je nach Lage – zu viel Fischkot, zu wenig Licht – die Sauerstoffversorgung ganz ausbleiben kann. Dann schlägt es den guten alten Weg ein, um seine energetisch ausgebeuteten Elektronen loszuwerden. Über seine leitenden Membranfortsätze nutzt es die eisenreichen Sedimente der Umgebung als Ablageplatz.
      Technology Review Juli 2018
      TR 07/2018

      Dieser Beitrag stammt aus Ausgabe 07/2018 der Technology Review. Das Heft ist ab 21.06.2018 im Handel sowie direkt im heise shop erhältlich. Highlights aus dem Heft:

      Schutz vor radioaktiven Strahlen
      Antimaterie aus der Dose
      Jetzt mal ehrlich!
      Der Sonne entgegen
      Flüchtlingslager auf Blockchain
      Fokus: Zwischen den Fronten
      Fokus: Wer soll das bezahlen?
      TR bestellen

      Dieser Mechanismus lässt sich so manipulieren, dass eine völlig neuartige Quelle für Elektrizität entsteht: Man muss den Mikroorganismen lediglich mit einer appetitlichen Portion Ladung an die Anode eines Stromkreises locken, mit ausreichend organischem Material füttern – schon lässt der Einzeller reichlich Strom fließen. Mögliche Anwendungen gibt es viele: Unter anderem arbeiten Forscher an Mikroorganismenbatterien und an Lösungen, um aus menschlichen Abwässern Strom zu gewinnen. Chinesische Umwelttechnologen aus Hefei versuchen beispielsweise, die Einzeller gentechnisch so zu verändern, dass sie zwei verschiedene Sorten von Elektronentunneln nebeneinander tragen. So wollen sie die elektrische Ausbeute dieser "Microbial Fuel Cells" steigern. Denn noch sind sie nicht besonders effektiv. Im Labor funktioniert die Idee schon mit Milchsäure als Mikroorganismenfutter – der Praxistest in der Kläranlage steht noch aus.
      Rohstoffproduktion

      Auch der umgekehrte Weg ist denkbar: Strom in wertvolle Rohstoffe zu verwandeln. Einen besonders vielversprechenden Weg dorthin hat Spormann gerade bei Mikroorganismen der Art Methanococcus maripaludis entdeckt. Sie leben tief im Boden feuchten Marschlandes, und bisher glaubte man, dass sie sich dort nur von Kohlendioxid und Wasserstoff ernähren. Offenbar können sie aber auch direkt Elektronen aufnehmen, um selbst Wasserstoff zu machen. Zentral dafür ist ein bisher unbekannter Proteinkomplex, der wie ein Trinkhalm für Elektronen funktioniert. Mithilfe des aufgesogenen Stroms und CO2 produziert Methanococcus schließlich Methan, Erdgas also. "Wir haben bereits viele Anfragen von Energieunternehmen", freut sich der Forscher.

      Die Mikroorganismen könnten ein zentrales Problem der Energiewende lösen: Sonnenkollektoren und Windräder sammeln oft viel mehr Strom, als sie ad hoc in die Netze geben können. Millionen Euro gehen einfach verloren, zusätzlich belastet die extrem schwankende Stromerzeugung die Netze. Schon lange wird deswegen nach einer wirtschaftlichen Möglichkeit gesucht, den Strom zu speichern. Diese Mikroorganismen "tun genau das", sagt Spormann. "Und zwar ohne den Energieverlust, den man beim Betreiben von Biogasanlagen oder die elektrochemische Wasserstoffsynthese für ähnliche Systeme hinnehmen muss." Die Ausbeute, mit der die eingespeisten Elektronen zu Methan reagieren, liegt bei über 90 Prozent. Es gibt zwar bereits ein Unternehmen, das so eine mikroorganismenbasierte Stromspeicherung anwendet. Doch die Mikroorganismen von Electrochaea in München können nicht direkt mit Elektronen gefüttert werden. Sie benötigen Wasserstoff – der erst einmal mit Solarstrom aus Wasser hergestellt werden muss. Dabei geht Energie verloren, das Unternehmen gibt seinen Wirkungsgrad mit 58 Prozent an. "Für mich sieht unser integriertes System nach der Zukunft aus", sagt daher Spormann selbstbewusst. (Nike Heinen) / (inwu)"
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 15:11:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.649 ()
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      schrieb am 29.06.18 23:10:00
      Beitrag Nr. 1.651 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.103.071 von Popeye82 am 29.06.18 21:49:29Finland's largest food company to sell bread:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek: , made of insects(world's First)





      http://www.dailysabah.com/food/2017/11/23/finlands-largest-f…



      http://www.fazer.fi/
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      schrieb am 30.06.18 22:44:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.652 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 30.06.18 23:00:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.653 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.107.460 von Popeye82 am 30.06.18 22:44:05TRANSforming Aquaculture, with IoT

      https://olc.worldbank.org/content/transforming-aquaculture-i…



      https://eruvaka.com/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 30.06.18 23:25:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.654 ()
      Method assembles cellulose nanofibres into a material stronger than spider silk; Researchers, @KTH, have produced a bio-based material, that is reported to surpass the strength of all known bio-based materials, whether fabricated or natural, including wood +spider silk; Working with cellulose nanofibre(CNF), the essential building block of wood +other plant life, the researchers report that they have overcome the difficulty in translating the incredible mechanical properties of these nanofibres into larger, lightweight materials, for use in airplanes, cars, furniture, +other products

      http://www.biofpr.com/details/news/11069644/Method_assembles…



      http://www.kth.se/en
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      schrieb am 01.07.18 00:16:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.655 ()
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      schrieb am 01.07.18 02:05:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.656 ()
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      schrieb am 01.07.18 06:49:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.657 ()
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 02.07.18 08:36:45
      Beitrag Nr. 1.659 ()
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      schrieb am 02.07.18 18:21:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.660 ()
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      schrieb am 02.07.18 21:46:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.661 ()
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      schrieb am 02.07.18 23:39:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.662 ()
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      schrieb am 03.07.18 02:07:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.663 ()
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      schrieb am 03.07.18 02:37:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.664 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.096.102 von Popeye82 am 29.06.18 10:32:18
      https://reneweconomy.com.au/tesla-in-talks-for-really-really…
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      schrieb am 03.07.18 03:20:26
      Beitrag Nr. 1.665 ()
      Solar Panel Innovation Allows for Plant Growth, Energy Generation, Simultaneously
      http://www.rdmag.com/article/2018/06/solar-panel-innovation-…
      http://www.rd100conference.com/awards/winners-finalists/6802…

      https://iat.ustc.edu.cn/

      "Although solar energy is one of the cleanest and most abundant renewable energy sources available, the space required to install solar systems can be a barrier to its implementation.

      In countries where farmland is limited, solar panel insulation just isn’t a realistic option, said Jan Ingenhoff, PhD, a research professor at the Institute of Advanced Technology, the University of Science & Technology of China (USTC).

      “If you look at the solar panels that are typically installed on farmland areas, you can’t do much beneath them so farmers have basically had to give up part of their land for this solar panel insulation,” Ingenhoff, in an interview with R&D Magazine, said. “Some farmers are OK with it because they have very large land areas, but in countries like Israel or China, where you have a shortage of land, it is not good to sacrifice that land for regular solar panels.”

      To solve this problem, Ingenhoff—along with his colleague Wen Liu, PhD and their team at USTC—has developed the Agriculture Solar Concentrator Photovoltaic, a new type of solar panel system that allows for simultaneous plant growth and solar energy generation on the same land.

      The team currently has four working prototypes installed in China, a country in urgent need of maintaining and recovering any agricultural land due to drastic urbanization in the past.

      The researchers have two more installations planned for 2019 and 2020, and are moving toward making their system commercially available.

      To do so, they've created a start-up based in China called Fuyang Angkefeng (China) Optoelectronic Technology Co., which Liu is the chairman of.

      The technology was a 2017 R&D 100 Award winner.

      How it works

      The system is based on the concept that plants don’t actually need 100 percent of the light sources the sun provides, Ingenhoff explained.

      “Plants need only about 10 percent of the light, some blue and some red light and that’s all. The rest you can leverage for solar energy generation,” he said. “The solar panels could be described as semi-transparent. Some light is going through them allowing the plants to grow, while the rest is used for solar energy.”


      The Concentrator Photovoltaic (CPV) setup is collecting specific reflected light for solar power generation. Credit: IAT

      The system uses curved solar panels that are covered with a film created by several polymer layers staged together to form a dichroitic multilayer film. This allows the selective transmission of only the wavelengths necessary for photosynthesis and plant growth. All remaining sunlight is reflected and focused to concentrating solar cells for photovoltaic power generation. A dual tracking system ensures that the reflected wavelengths are focused on the concentrating solar cells throughout the day.

      The system can also be adjusted for the seasons.

      During winter, the generated electricity could be additionally used to supply light to the plants via red and blue LED, while during the summer, when sunlight is vastly available, the split-ratio could be such, that the sunlight can majorly be used to generate electricity, while there is no negative effect on the plant growth.

      The way the light is split between solar energy generation and the plants can also be adjusted for specific plant needs, Ingenhoff said.

      “We have studied what kind of light different plants need,” he said. “For example tomatoes need a little bit more red light, while lettuce may need a little bit more blue light. You can adjust this very specifically to these plants and what they need. That is a huge benefit for the farmers because some want to focus on strawberries, some want to focus on tomatoes and they can say, OK we need this kind of film system and we [the USTC team] can make that happen.”

      Currently, the system can produce approximately 90 watts per square meter of energy, but the researchers are are working to optimize their film to transmit more precisely the amount of light the plants need to increase its energy generation. They expect to soon be able to produce 120 to 130 watts per square meter.

      This is slightly short of the 150 watts per square meter of energy that conventional solar panels produce, Ingenhoff said.

      “We will be indeed always be a little bit short compared to the regular solar panels because some of the light is used for the plants,” he added. “But the advantage is that you can establish this system on farmland and do both solar energy generation and plant growth so I believe it’s worth it.”


      Credit: IAT

      Other advantages

      In addition to solar energy generation, the Agriculture Solar Concentrator Photovoltaic can also be used to improve plant growth, especially in drought-stricken regions.

      “About five to ten years ago people were a little concerned about letting plants just grow by blue and red light, because your first gut feeling is that the plants need all the light,” said Ingenhoff. “But there have been many studies that plants grow very well and even indeed better with just blue and red light. One of the reason for this is that if you block these near infrared (NIR) and ‎far infrared light (FIR) from reaching the plants, you protect them from the heat, and the water evaporation on the farm is reduced. You have a better growth potential for the plants with the growth system.”

      Reducing water use is an especially important issue in countries in the southern hemispheres which face water shortages, as well as China, Ingenhoff noted.

      The researchers grew lettuce, cucumber and water spinach with the film covering and without the film and found that the lettuce grew to 17.59 cm with the film and 12.83 cm without, the cucumber grew to 15.50 cm with film and 15 cm without, and the water spinach grew to 12.67 cm with film, and 11.160 cm without.


      The Agriculture Photovoltaic (APV) transmitting necessary light for plant growth (blue and red light). Credit: IAT

      Next steps

      The team now plans to adjust the current systems in use based on farmer feedback. They also need to assure that the systems hold up long-term without deteriorating, and can be cleaned and maintained easily.

      The team is currently working to expand the use of their system outside of Asia and are working speaking with potential clients in Spain as well as the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Colorado to set up joint actives and new prototypes.

      Decreasing the cost of the system is also a goal of the research team, said Ingenhoff.

      “We need to understand how the cost could be brought down when you install the system in larger areas. At the moment the cost is OK, but when we want to promote this product on a larger scale we will need to bring the cost down. We are working on making the film more cost effective so that more people can utilize it.” "
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      schrieb am 06.07.18 23:12:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.666 ()
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      schrieb am 07.07.18 00:04:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.667 ()
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      schrieb am 07.07.18 00:18:16
      Beitrag Nr. 1.668 ()
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      schrieb am 07.07.18 17:53:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.669 ()
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      schrieb am 07.07.18 19:35:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.670 ()
      ernsthafte Verluste für den Schutz der menschlichen Gesundheit






      http://www.wallstreet-online.de/nachricht/10671523-lebensmit…
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      schrieb am 07.07.18 23:05:13
      Beitrag Nr. 1.671 ()
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      schrieb am 08.07.18 03:07:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.672 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.599.421 von Popeye82 am 22.04.18 02:36:31
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      schrieb am 08.07.18 07:06:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.673 ()

      http://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/technik/usa-atomausstieg-…
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      schrieb am 08.07.18 22:58:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.674 ()

      - ecosummitTV
      Am 25.05.2018 veröffentlicht
      Ana Trbovich pitches Grid Singularity at Ecosummit Berlin 2018. In fact, she gives an update on the Energy Web Foundation which was co-founded by Grid Singularity together with Rocky Mountain Institute. The Energy Web Foundation wants to offer an open energy blockchain platform and has got over 50 members already. -
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 08.07.18 23:22:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.675 ()











      - In this exclusive clip, Tyson asks Hawking your standard softball interview question: what was around before the big bang? In other words, what happened before the moment the universe began? Check out Hawking’s answer: “The boundary condition of the universe...is that it has no boundary,” Hawking says.-
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?CMPID=ene070818&v=FJ88kC2Nx8M
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 00:20:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.676 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.165.529 von Popeye82 am 08.07.18 22:58:04
      - Bitkom
      Am 28.11.2016 veröffentlicht
      Ewald Hesse, CEO Grid Singularity, speaks about "Blockchain - Potential for the energy grid“
      at hub conference in Berlin, 22 November 2016.

      Once a year, the digital avant-garde is coming to the hub conference in Berlin:
      visionary masterminds, global players, startups and hidden champions, CEOs and CIOs.
      A different city. A culture of creativity. A conference on digital disruption and possibilities. -
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 02:28:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1.677 ()
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 07:32:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.678 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.982.605 von Popeye82 am 14.06.18 08:53:06
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 08:12:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.679 ()
      9 Antworten
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 08:29:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1.680 ()
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      schrieb am 09.07.18 13:21:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.681 ()
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 12:48:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.682 ()
      HAZARDS in paradise, oder: Ey Mann, wo is' mein Auto???

      http://www.earthmagazine.org/article/hazards-paradise-indone…
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 14:44:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.683 ()
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 14:56:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.684 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 16:34:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.685 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.178.069 von Popeye82 am 10.07.18 14:56:08fish
      http://trendlines.com/opportunities-challenges-fish-2-0/
      http://www.fish20.org/
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 19:46:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.686 ()
      BeYOND belief: 5,221-horsepower, battery-powered (Bulgarian) Batmobile

      https://newatlas.com/alieno-arcanum-5000-horsepower-electric…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 21:42:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.687 ()
      NEW world record, for (direct) solar water-splitting efficiency

      http://www.helmholtz-berlin.de/pubbin/news_seite?nid=14854;s…
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 22:21:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.688 ()
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 23:07:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.689 ()
      EU wants populism-proof climate policy, 100 years of US shale gas to come, India gets serious on solar, rescue effort for nuclear
      www.internet.com

      "Welcome to the 101st issue of Energy Post Weekly!

      *NEW: TRY OUT the new search function - search by topic, author or other keyword*

      Energy Post Weekly brings you the bottom-line on European and international energy affairs from Energy Post's editor-in-chief Karel Beckman and EU correspondent Sonja van Renssen in Brussels. Sign up here for a free trial

      IN KAREL BECKMAN’S ENERGY WATCH:

      100 years of shale gas to come - but does the world want it?

      Cedigaz sees a very tiny cloud for gas on the horizon
      Gas execs see century of shale gas supply in US

      Europe, take heart - India is joining the energy transition with a vengeance

      India drastically curtails coal power plans and announces stupendous solar power expansion

      Around the world, offshore wind and storage are taking off

      After Europe, offshore wind is starting up in India, Australia, Turkey, the U.S.

      Western leaders rally behind nuclear power

      U.S., UK and Japan are getting ready to rescue their nuclear power sector

      IN BRUSSELS INSIDER THIS WEEK

      EU wants its climate policy to be "populism-proof"

      No new targets, gas is in, jobs and growth are key: climate policy must become part of post-Brexit EU identity

      Electric planes, behavioural change, radical industrial reform: net zero emissions will be tough, warns Eurelectric

      A 95% CO2 emission reduction will require exponential, not linear efforts, according to Eurelectric

      IN ENERGY POST EXPRESS

      "Poland a failed state in gas trading, not dependent on Russian gas"

      Oil companies dragged into court - but doing fine otherwise

      Germany and Italy most energy efficient countries, U.S. and Australia slide back

      Fraunhofer: Agrophotovoltaic farming works"
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      schrieb am 10.07.18 23:49:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.690 ()
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      schrieb am 11.07.18 02:41:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.691 ()

      http://www.touchstoneinnovations.com/news-room/2018/jan/3/ne…



      http://www.nexeon.co.uk/

      "Nexeon Leads Major Project Aimed @Doubling Range, of Next Generation EVs; Portfolio company Nexeon, the company developing silicon materials for next generation Li-ion batteries, +its partners have been awarded £7million in Innovate UK funding, for a project to develop, significantly, better materials for Li-ion batteries. The work is an essential step to achieving electric vehicles:eek::eek::eek: (EVs), with a range of 400 miles, +above


      The project, named SUNRISE (after Synthomer, UCL & Nexeon’s Rapid Improvement in the Storage of Energy), will develop better battery materials based on silicon as a replacement for carbon in the cell anode, and optimise cell designs for automotive application.

      Innovate UK will fund the majority of the £10million project as part of the Faraday Battery Challenge. SUNRISE will also enhance the UK’s position as a centre of excellence for battery development, and support the materials manufacturing supply chain in the UK.

      Nexeon will lead the silicon material development and scale-up stages of the SUNRISE project, while leading polymer company Synthomer will lead the development of a next generation polymer binder optimised to work with silicon, and ensure anode/binder cohesion during a lifetime of charges. Nexeon and University College London (UCL) will jointly lead the work on material characterisation and cell performance.

      Silicon is currently being adopted as a partial replacement for carbon in battery anodes, typically up to the level of 10% replacement, but problems caused by expansion when the cells are charged and discharged remain a hurdle. Project SUNRISE addresses the silicon expansion and binder system issues, and allows more silicon to be used, further increasing the energy density that can be achieved in the cell. Innovative silicon anode material with a polymer binder represents a ‘drop-in’ replacement for current graphite anode systems. Lower cost and better performance power sources will reduce the time required for EVs to achieve mass adoption.

      “The biggest problems facing EVs - range anxiety, cost, charge time or charging station availability - are almost all related to limitations of the batteries”, says Nexeon CEO, Dr Scott Brown. “Silicon anodes are now well established on the technology road maps of major automotive OEMs and cell makers, and Nexeon has received support from UK and global OEMs, several of whom will be involved in this project as it develops.

      “The challenges in developing the next generation of range enabling EV battery technology creates new opportunities for partners in the material supply chain”, says Dr Robin Harrison, Synthomer’s Global Innovation Director. “Synthomer is pleased to build upon its existing experience in battery binder systems in order to realise the revolutionary potential in the SUNRISE silicon anode.”

      Dr Paul Shearing, Reader in Chemical Engineering at UCL adds: “We are delighted to be working on this project, which is so important for the future development of battery electric vehicles, and leverages the unique facilities at UCL in partnership with Nexeon and Synthomer to deliver real world research impact.”

      Ruth McKernan, Innovate UK Chief Executive, said: “The Faraday Battery Challenge is breaking new ground because it offers for the first time a co-ordinated programme of competitions across research, innovation and scale-up. It will therefore draw the very best of the UK’s world-leading research into commercial technologies, and put UK businesses at the forefront of electric vehicle battery development.”

      The Faraday Battery Challenge was announced in July, and is the first in a series of Research Challenges managed by Innovate UK as part of the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund (ISCF). The Faraday Battery Challenge is an investment of £246m over four years to help UK businesses seize the opportunities presented by the transition to a low carbon economy, to ensure the UK leads the world in the design, development and manufacture of batteries for electric vehicles. Success in creating a viable battery supply chain will lead to the creation of hundreds of UK jobs, according to Innovate UK."
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.07.18 03:47:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.692 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.07.18 09:35:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.693 ()

      http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/service/produktion-oekostro…
      http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/soziales/oekostrom-produkti…
      http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/soziales/kohlekommission-wi…

      "Erstmals mehr Öko- als Kohlestrom; die erneuerbaren Energien haben IM ERSTEN HALBJAHR 2018 BRAUN- UND KOHLEKRAFTWERKE BEI DER STROMERZEUGUNG ÜBERHOLT. Die Erneuerbaren waren damit Deutschlands wichtigste Stromquelle




      In Deutschland ist erstmals mehr Strom aus erneuerbaren Energien erzeugt worden als aus Kohle. Im ersten Halbjahr 2018 hätten Wind, Sonne oder Wasser fast 118 Milliarden Kilowattstunden produziert, teilte der Bundesverband der Energiewirtschaft (BDEW) mit. Das entspreche einem Anstieg von über zehn Prozent gegenüber dem Vorjahreszeitraum.
      Anzeige

      Der Anteil an der Stromerzeugung habe etwa 36 Prozent betragen. Braun- und Steinkohle zusammen produzierten dagegen gut zehn Prozent weniger. Die Erneuerbaren waren damit Deutschlands wichtigste Stromquelle.

      "Diese Zahlen belegen eindrucksvoll: Der marktgetriebene, schrittweise Ausstieg aus der Kohleverstromung ist schon in vollem Gange", sagte BDEW-Chef Stefan Kapferer. In Deutschland läuft noch eine Reihe sehr alter, wartungsintensiver Kohlekraftwerke, die die Betreiber zunehmend aus Kostengründen vom Netz nehmen.

      Am Freitag trifft sich die Kohlekommission der Bundesregierung zu ihrer zweiten Sitzung. Sie soll aus Gründen des Klimaschutzes ein Enddatum für das letzte Kohlekraftwerk festlegen und zugleich den besonders betroffenen Regionen neue wirtschaftliche Perspektiven aufzeigen.

      hej/Reuters/dpa-AFX"
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 11.07.18 11:45:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.694 ()
      Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman plans to develop the world’s largest solar power project, when built, the plant will be about times:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek: the size of the biggest one operating. today.

      - Saudi Arabia and SoftBank have partnered to build a 200-gigawatt solar plant
      - The project will require a $200 billion investment in order to be ready by 2030
      - At a 200gw capacity, it would be about 200 times the size of the biggest plant
      - The solar plant would easily cover the land area of many of the world's cities


      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-5571485/Saudi…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.07.18 15:58:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.695 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 12:25:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.696 ()
      hat Die Musk-Gang endgültig den Verstand verloren

      http://www.ingenieur.de/technik/fachbereiche/e-mobilitaet/se…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 12.07.18 13:15:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.697 ()



      https://smallcaps.com.au/uk-road-to-zero-plan-all-electric-2…

      " UK unveils ambitious plan to go all-electric by 2040
      By
      Imelda Cotton -
      July 12, 2018


      A ban on the sale of high-polluting petrol and diesel-powered cars in favour of ultra-low emission electric vehicles is the cornerstone of a new initiative announced this week by the UK government to improve the adoption of green technologies across the country.

      The government confirmed its ambitions to become the world’s leader in zero emission vehicle technology with the release of its Road to Zero strategy designed to cut the nation’s harmful emissions by 2030 and improve the number of low-emissions vehicles on the roads by 2040.

      In unveiling the 46-point strategy, UK Transport Minister Chris Grayling said the wide range of initiatives and incentives being proposed places the government at the forefront of the global movement towards cleaner road transport technologies.

      “The sales of ultra-low emission vehicles are increasing rapidly and countries, regions and cities across the world have announced long-term plans for cleaner road transport,” he said.

      “By some estimates, ultra low emission vehicles will make up over half of global car sales by 2040 [which will mean] fundamental changes to the global automotive market and new opportunities for the UK.”

      Out with the old, in with the new

      Under the terms of Road to Zero, at least 50% of the UK’s conventional vehicles – excluding petrol and diesel-powered hybrid cars – will be phased out nationwide by 2030 to make way for new generation ultra-low emissions electric vehicles.

      By 2040, the government expects all new cars and vans sold within the UK to “have significant zero emissions capability” and by 2050, almost every car to be zero-emission.

      Road to Zero also includes a push for charge points to be installed in new-build homes and on street lamp posts throughout England, underpinned by a A$179 million Charging Infrastructure Investment plan to assist new and existing companies with their charge point installation requirements.

      Another A$70m has been earmarked for the development and testing of new, cost-effective, on-street charging technologies, while a further A$8m will be used for an Onstreet Residential Chargepoint Scheme and provide funding to local authorities.

      Critics question strategy timeframes

      The Road to Zero strategy comes at a time when the UK government is being criticised for not doing enough to curb carbon emissions, and it appears to have already ruffled some feathers.

      The original launch date was delayed by a dispute over which cars should be allowed to be sold after 2040, with the government finally confirming this month that hybrid cars and vans will be excluded from the ban.

      The Green Alliance think tank has been quick to criticise the strategy’s timeframes, saying 2040 is “too late” for a total ban on conventional vehicles and claiming that an earlier deadline would provide more incentive to UK electric vehicle makers and put them on a par with the likes of Norway and Scotland, both of which have committed to the same ban by 2030.

      Also in the environmental space, Friends of the Earth network challenged the strategy’s ability to effect real change, saying the UK is “dangerously behind target on cutting carbon” and that the proposal “while positive, will not get us back on track”.

      The Campaign for Better Transport advocacy group echoed the belief that faster transitioning between high and low emissions technologies is required and suggested that “overall, the strategy fails to match the urgency of the situation”.

      At the opposite end of the spectrum, Greenpeace UK said the strategy is not ambitious enough, advising the government to “shift up a gear or this Road to Zero will start looking like a road to nowhere”.

      A growing sector

      Petrol and diesel vehicles have dominated worldwide automotive markets for over a century and have been reported to still account for more than 99% of global sales.

      According to research by the UK’s RAC Foundation, electric vehicles made up only 5.5% of the UK’s new car market in the six months to June 2018, compared with 4.3% over the previous corresponding period – indicating a growing, albeit slow, trend away from consumer comfort zones towards low emissions vehicles.

      “The coming decades are going to be transformative for our motor industry, our national infrastructure and the way we travel,” Mr Grayling said.

      “The Road to Zero strategy sets out a clear path for Britain to become a world leader in the zero emission revolution, ensuring that the [our country] has cleaner air, a better environment and a stronger economy.”"
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 14:18:40
      Beitrag Nr. 1.698 ()
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 15:16:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.699 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 16:38:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.700 ()
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 18:54:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.701 ()
      FIRST, large-scale, production of renewable, bio-based polypropylene plastic, globally


      http://news.bio-based.eu/ikea-and-neste-take-a-significant-s…

      http://www.ikea.com/



      http://www.neste.us/
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      schrieb am 12.07.18 22:02:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.702 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.197.614 von Popeye82 am 12.07.18 15:16:59
      https://ilbioeconomista.com/2018/07/12/uk-waste-feedstocks-f…
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      schrieb am 13.07.18 10:03:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.703 ()
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      schrieb am 13.07.18 18:55:12
      Beitrag Nr. 1.704 ()
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      schrieb am 13.07.18 20:01:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.705 ()
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      schrieb am 14.07.18 12:08:55
      Beitrag Nr. 1.706 ()
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      schrieb am 14.07.18 14:30:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.707 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.166.378 von Popeye82 am 09.07.18 08:12:06
      http://www.nexttechstock.com/roo-signs-second-deal-many-days…
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      schrieb am 14.07.18 17:27:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.708 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.187.786 von Popeye82 am 11.07.18 15:58:02REVOLUTIONARY (ALL-in-one) water treatment system increases productivity, has a minimal ecological footprint, enhances water conditions, AND significantly grows profitability

      http://trendlines.com/wp-content/uploads/BioFishency-present…

      http://www.biofishency.com/technology

      http://trendlines.com/biofishency-taps-shellfish-market/

      http://trendlines.com/biofishency-makes-aquaculture-accessib…

      http://agtech.partneringforinnovation.org/community/technolo…

      http://www.israelexporter.com/upgrade-community-fish-farms

      http://www.israel21c.org/israeli-systems-aiding-fish-farmers…

      http://www.facebook.com/biofishency/posts



      http://www.biofishency.com/






      Avatar
      schrieb am 14.07.18 17:41:16
      Beitrag Nr. 1.709 ()
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      schrieb am 14.07.18 20:27:12
      Beitrag Nr. 1.710 ()

      - Tech Insider
      Am 03.04.2017 veröffentlicht
      Just how deep does the ocean go? Way further than you think. This animation puts the actual distance into perspective, showing a vast distance between the waves we see and the mysterious point we call Challenger Deep.

      Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/sai

      FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/techinsider
      TWITTER: https://twitter.com/techinsider
      INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/businessins...
      TUMBLR: http://businessinsider.tumblr.com/ -
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      schrieb am 14.07.18 22:52:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.711 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.184.282 von Popeye82 am 11.07.18 09:35:46
      https://reneweconomy.com.au/spain-nears-50-renewables-first-…
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      schrieb am 15.07.18 07:18:00
      Beitrag Nr. 1.712 ()









      http://www.clicko-brick.com/
      - 'Clicko-Brick' is a green tech startup that offers a functional and economic solution to the problem of disposable plastic containers. Clicko-Bricks are interlocking, modular plastic containers for liquid, planned for short-term use (like bottled water), and long-term reuse as multi-purpose smart building blocks (for walls, floating fields DIY kits etc.). The product also tackles problems and needs in the building world. -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.07.18 00:08:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.713 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.107.916 von Popeye82 am 01.07.18 06:49:07:mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:









      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.07.18 00:38:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.714 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.180.892 von Popeye82 am 10.07.18 19:46:362000 hp hypercar, +the making of a new brand

      https://newatlas.com/automobili-pininfarina-instant-cred-pre…



      http://www.automobili-pininfarina.com/
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 00:50:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.715 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 01:01:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.716 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.219.884 von Popeye82 am 16.07.18 00:50:22
      https://de.sputniknews.com/technik/20180623321283120-mars-he…



      http://www.nasa.gov/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.07.18 01:59:45
      Beitrag Nr. 1.717 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.166.378 von Popeye82 am 09.07.18 08:12:06world-FIRST pilot, in a commercial operation, combining RZTO temperature control +Nutrient Film Technique(NFT) technologies

      http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20180716/pdf/43wjqyw5bg1062.pdf






      http://rootssat.com/
      7 Antworten
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 05:26:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.718 ()
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 06:47:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.719 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 06:59:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.720 ()
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      schrieb am 16.07.18 08:39:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.721 ()
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      schrieb am 18.07.18 04:44:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.722 ()
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      schrieb am 19.07.18 01:29:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.723 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.981.993 von Popeye82 am 14.06.18 07:41:16
      http://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/7/acceleware-prosper-p…
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      schrieb am 19.07.18 01:41:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.724 ()
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      schrieb am 19.07.18 05:45:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.725 ()
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      schrieb am 19.07.18 10:04:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.726 ()
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      schrieb am 20.07.18 17:01:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.727 ()
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      schrieb am 20.07.18 20:25:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.728 ()
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      schrieb am 20.07.18 23:45:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.729 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 20.07.18 23:57:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.730 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.266.812 von Popeye82 am 20.07.18 23:45:57
      - Losses due to pests cost farmers billions of dollars every year. Plant science helps to prevent this problem in food’s journey from the field to the plate. -
      https://croplife.org/news/the-real-impact-of-pre-harvest-los…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.07.18 20:25:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.731 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 57.400.502 von rv_2011 am 27.03.18 17:35:41RV

      Schauen Sie Hier vielleicht auch mal rein, @1.618:
      https://www.wallstreet-online.de/diskussion/1233389-1611-162…
      Ist im Prinzip genau Das Thema,
      in wieweit Konkrete Zahlen genannt werden weiss ich soweit noch nicht.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.07.18 04:30:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.732 ()
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      schrieb am 24.07.18 04:43:14
      Beitrag Nr. 1.733 ()
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      schrieb am 24.07.18 05:47:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.734 ()
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      schrieb am 24.07.18 10:59:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.735 ()
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      schrieb am 24.07.18 18:41:15
      Beitrag Nr. 1.736 ()
      The White House is moving ahead with plans to unravel vehicle emissions standards

      The result could be billions of tons of additional climate pollution.
      The plan: Federal agencies are marching ahead with long-expected plans to halt the rise in federal vehicle emissions standards, according to Bloomberg. The proposal will also seek to withdraw Environmental Protection Agency waivers that have allowed California to implement its own, higher set of vehicle emissions rules.
      How big of a difference could it make? The Obama administration's decision to lock in rising fuel economy standards was a critical plank in the plan to meet the nation's goals under the landmark Paris climate agreement. The EPA estimated in 2012 that increasingly efficient cars and personal trucks would eliminate 140 million tons of greenhouse gases in 2025.
      On the other hand... Unraveling fuel economy standards and eliminating the California waiver will both entail an extended process of public notice and comment, Danny Cullenward, an energy economist and lawyer at the Carnegie Institution, previously told MIT Technology Review. California and 16 other states have already filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's efforts to rollback fuel standards, and other legal battles are likely to follow.
      http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-07-23/trump-is-s…
      https://www.technologyreview.com/s/603582/how-much-damage-co…
      http://www.tronc.com/gdpr/latimes.com/
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      schrieb am 25.07.18 16:10:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.737 ()
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      schrieb am 26.07.18 03:07:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.738 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.219.950 von Popeye82 am 16.07.18 01:59:45
      https://stockhead.com.au/special-report/how-agtech-roots-sus…
      6 Antworten
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      schrieb am 26.07.18 07:58:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.739 ()

      www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/mensch/jordanien-archaeologen-en…
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      schrieb am 26.07.18 09:15:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.740 ()
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      schrieb am 28.07.18 00:18:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.741 ()
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      schrieb am 29.07.18 02:08:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.742 ()
      Cat poop is changing human brains


      www.popsci.com/toxoplasma-gondii-parasite-risk-taking?CMPID=…
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      schrieb am 29.07.18 03:05:40
      Beitrag Nr. 1.743 ()
      a VERY important 1st step, in the direction of plastic biodegradability. in soil; our world is drowning in a flood of plastic. Eight million tons of plastic end up in the oceans. every year. Agricultural soils are also threatened by plastic pollution. Farmers around the world apply enormous amounts of polyethylene(PE) mulch films, onto soils, to combat weeds, increase soil.....................

      www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-07/ez-sbm072418.php



      www.ethz.ch
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      schrieb am 29.07.18 22:26:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.744 ()
      what are YOU doing, to move the day???????????????????????????????????














      http://www.overshootday.org/
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 30.07.18 00:15:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.745 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.220.145 von Popeye82 am 16.07.18 06:47:23



      www.calix.com.au
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      schrieb am 30.07.18 00:42:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.746 ()
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      schrieb am 30.07.18 02:41:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.747 ()
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      schrieb am 30.07.18 05:30:15
      Beitrag Nr. 1.748 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.329.714 von Popeye82 am 29.07.18 22:26:07


























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      schrieb am 30.07.18 16:51:57
      Beitrag Nr. 1.749 ()
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      schrieb am 31.07.18 00:20:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.750 ()
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      schrieb am 31.07.18 04:25:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.751 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 31.07.18 04:37:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.752 ()
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      schrieb am 31.07.18 05:31:41
      Beitrag Nr. 1.753 ()
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      schrieb am 31.07.18 05:51:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.754 ()
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      schrieb am 01.08.18 15:17:41
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      schrieb am 01.08.18 15:48:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.756 ()
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      schrieb am 01.08.18 18:50:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.757 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.338.069 von Popeye82 am 31.07.18 04:25:25sag EINFACH auf WIEDERsehen






      www.sueddeutsche.de/wissen/kryobiose-nach-jahren-wieder-zum-…
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      schrieb am 02.08.18 13:37:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.758 ()
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      schrieb am 02.08.18 16:06:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.759 ()
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      schrieb am 02.08.18 19:14:02
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      schrieb am 02.08.18 21:39:33
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      schrieb am 06.08.18 00:45:14
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      schrieb am 06.08.18 03:08:07
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      schrieb am 07.08.18 23:44:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.764 ()
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      schrieb am 10.08.18 16:27:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.765 ()

      https://web.de/magazine/wissen/nasa-schickt-sonde-parker-sol…
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      schrieb am 10.08.18 18:14:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.766 ()

      www.geekwire.com/2018/ships-set-sail-seattle-nasa-mission-tr…
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      schrieb am 10.08.18 19:27:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.767 ()
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      schrieb am 10.08.18 22:14:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.768 ()
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      schrieb am 11.08.18 05:20:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.769 ()
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      schrieb am 12.08.18 05:58:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.770 ()
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      schrieb am 16.08.18 01:49:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.771 ()

      www.ifpri-faobangkokconference.org/2018/08/07/ending-hunger-…
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      schrieb am 18.08.18 08:03:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.772 ()
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      schrieb am 19.08.18 21:52:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.773 ()
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      schrieb am 21.08.18 04:09:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.774 ()





      www.livescience.com/63379-nasa-spots-fireball.html?utm_sourc…
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      schrieb am 21.08.18 04:33:38
      Beitrag Nr. 1.775 ()

      http://www.wallstreet-online.de/nachricht/10807756-kraftwerk…

      "Mannheim (dts Nachrichtenagentur) - Die Vorstände des Grosskraftwerks Mannheim (GKM) halten einen Ausstieg Deutschlands aus der Stromproduktion aus Kohle frühestens um das Jahr 2040 herum für möglich. "Alles andere ist unrealistisch", sagte der Kaufmännische GKM-Vorstand Holger Becker dem "Mannheimer Morgen" (Samstagausgabe). Als Gründe nannten er und sein Kollege Manfred Schumacher (Technischer Vorstand) Verzögerungen beim Leitungsausbau und fehlende Stromspeicher-Kapazitäten.

      Die von der Bundesregierung eingesetzte "Kohle-Kommission" soll bis Jahresende ein Datum für das Ende der Kohleverstromung in Deutschland vorschlagen. Für das GKM erwartet Becker sogar, dass dort "bis mindestens 2050 Strom aus Kohle produziert wird". Der dortige Block 9 sei der effizienteste in Deutschland und werde deshalb vermutlich als Letzter abgestellt. Das Grosskraftwerk Mannheim ist das größte Steinkohle-Kraftwerk Deutschlands. Es verkaufte 2017 neben Fernwärme 7,4 Milliarden Kilowattstunden Strom."
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      schrieb am 21.08.18 09:13:19
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      www.biobasedworldnews.com/the-first-cotton-corn-shoe-from-re…
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      schrieb am 02.09.18 13:23:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.786 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.303.922 von Popeye82 am 26.07.18 03:07:33
      https://finfeed.com/small-caps/technology/roots-blossoms-ear…
      5 Antworten
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      schrieb am 03.09.18 18:30:45
      Beitrag Nr. 1.787 ()
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      schrieb am 03.09.18 19:46:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.788 ()
      world's FIRST (Ocean cleanup) Solution


      https://newatlas.com/completed-ocean-cleanup-sea/56185/?utm_…



      www.theoceancleanup.com/technology/
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      schrieb am 04.09.18 21:20:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.789 ()
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      schrieb am 10.09.18 08:35:58
      Beitrag Nr. 1.794 ()
      "ANYthing made from fossil-based materials, today, can be made from a tree, tomorrow"

      https://ilbioeconomista.com/2018/09/10/an-interview-with-mar…



      www.storaenso.com
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      schrieb am 10.09.18 21:08:04
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.799 ()
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      schrieb am 16.09.18 15:41:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.800 ()
      they will poop+pee EVERYwhere





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      schrieb am 18.09.18 01:46:11
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      schrieb am 19.09.18 10:18:21
      Beitrag Nr. 1.804 ()

      https://reneweconomy.com.au/solar-takes-centre-stage-in-sout…
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      schrieb am 19.09.18 10:49:38
      Beitrag Nr. 1.805 ()
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      schrieb am 19.09.18 18:44:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.806 ()

      www.rdmag.com/article/2018/08/study-finds-numerous-exoplanet…



      "Study Finds That Numerous Exoplanets May be Water-Rich
      Tue, 08/21/2018 - 3:00pm
      by Kenny Walter - Digital Reporter - @RandDMagazine




      A team of scientists has found that several exoplanets between two and four times the size of Earth likely contain a substantial amount of water, a discovery that could have implications for the search of life in the galaxy.

      The researchers made the discovery that several of the known exoplanets can contain as much as 50 percent water after analyzing data from the Kepler Space Telescope and the Gaia mission.

      “It was a huge surprise to realize that there must be so many water-worlds,” lead researcher Li Zeng, PhD, of Harvard University, said in a statement.

      Previously, scientists split the 4,000 confirmed or candidate exoplanets into two size categories—planets with a planetary radius around 1.5 the size of Earth’s or planets with a planetary radius around 2.5 times that of Earth.

      In the new study, the scientists analyzed the exoplanets further with mass measurements and radius measurements to develop a model of their internal structure that indicates that the planets about 1.5 times the size of Earth tend to be rocky planets, while the other ones could be water worlds.

      “We have looked at how mass relates to radius, and developed a model which might explain the relationship,” Zeng said. “This is water, but not as commonly found here on Earth. Their surface temperature is expected to be in the 200 to 500 degree Celsius range.

      “Their surface may be shrouded in a water-vapor-dominated atmosphere, with a liquid water layer underneath. Moving deeper, one would expect to find this water transforms into high-pressure ices before we reaching the solid rocky core. The beauty of the model is that it explains just how composition relates to the known facts about these planets.”

      The new data indicates that about 35 percent of the known exoplanets larger than Earth are water-rich.

      “These water worlds likely formed in similar ways to the giant planet cores [Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune] which we find in our own solar system,” Zeng said. “The newly-launched TESS mission will find many more of them, with the help of ground-based spectroscopic follow-up.

      “The next generation space telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope, will hopefully characterize the atmosphere of some of them. This is an exciting time for those interested in these remote worlds.”

      The researchers presented their findings during the Goldschmidt Conference in Boston from August 12 to 17."
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      schrieb am 19.09.18 19:21:31
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      schrieb am 26.09.18 10:02:12
      Beitrag Nr. 1.816 ()
      TRANSformative, REVOLUTIONARY, world’s LARGEST Insect Farm




      https://agfundernews.com/enterra-feed-eyes-worlds-largest-in…



      www.enterrafeed.com
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      schrieb am 30.09.18 18:26:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.817 ()
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      schrieb am 01.10.18 06:15:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.819 ()
      Hot Planet Preview


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      schrieb am 01.10.18 09:52:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.820 ()
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      schrieb am 02.10.18 14:07:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.821 ()
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      schrieb am 02.10.18 16:50:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.822 ()






      :eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:
      www.sueddeutsche.de/wissen/physik-elementarteilchen-aus-der-…
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      schrieb am 02.10.18 19:13:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.823 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.824 ()
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      schrieb am 03.10.18 01:11:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.825 ()

      www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/natur/axolotl-forscher-entschlue…



      "Forscher entschlüsseln Geheimnis des Wunderlurchs:eek::eek::eek:



      Beine, Teile von Herz, Hirn und Wirbelsäule - beim Axolotl wächst alles nach. Nun sind sich Forscher sicher: Verantwortlich dafür sind Zellen, die auch bei Menschen vorkommen.
      Axolotl: Aus weg mach neu Fotos
      IMP Research Institute of Molecular Pathology
      Freitag, 28.09.2018 22:02 Uhr

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      Verliert ein Axolotl ein Bein oder gar Teile von Organen, ist das für die Schwanzlurche kein großes Problem. Innerhalb weniger Wochen wächst Ersatz nach. Forscher rätseln seit Langem, wie die Überlebenskünstler aus Mexiko das schaffen. Einige vermuteten beispielsweise, Axolotl verfügten über eine Art Wunderzelle, die die Heilung in Gang setzt.
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      Ein internationales Forscherteam hat nun genau untersucht, welche Körperregionen für die erstaunliche Regeneration verantwortlich sind. Auf magische Zellen sind sie allerdings nicht gestoßen. Stattdessen lassen offenbar gewöhnliche Zellen des Bindegewebes ganze Gliedmaßen nachwachsen, berichten die Wissenschaftler im Fachblatt "Science".

      Das Erstaunliche: Diese Zellen gibt es auch bei Säugetieren, also auch bei Menschen. Bei uns sorgen sie allerdings nicht für wundersame Heilung, sondern für Narben.
      Fotostrecke

      11 Bilder
      Axolotl: Aus weg mach neu

      Wie kann das sein? "Die Bindegewebszellen von Axolotln spulen in ihrer Entwicklung einfach zurück", sagt der Leipziger Forscher Tobias Gerber, der an der Studie beteiligt war. Aus hochspezialisierten Körperzellen, sogenannten Fibroblasten, werden dadurch wieder Vorläuferzellen, die verschiedene Bindegewebetypen bilden können - egal ob Haut, Knochen oder Sehnen.
      Anzeige

      Ähnliche Alleskönner-Zellen gibt es auch in den Armknospen von Embryonen. Sie verfügen quasi über den Bauplan der Gliedmaßen und sorgen dafür, dass alles exakt so heranwächst, wie es soll.

      Den Wissenschaftlern ist es nun erstmals gelungen, die Regeneration bei Axolotln auf Zellebene zu beobachten. Die Studien wurden am Forschungsinstitut für Molekulare Pathologie (IMP) in Wien, am Max-Planck-Institut für evolutionäre Anthropologie (MPI-EVA) in Leipzig und am Zentrum für Regenerative Therapien in Dresden (CRTD) durchgeführt.

      Die Forscher markierten und isolierten zunächst Bindegewebszellen der Tiere, um anschließend einzelne Gensequenzen zu entschlüsseln. Sie konnten so genau bestimmen, welche der Abertausenden Zellen für die erstaunliche Heilung sorgen. "Das war so, als würden wir den Inhalt einer Obstschale zu Saft verarbeiten ohne zu wissen, welche Arten von Obst die Schale enthält," sagt Prayag Murawala vom IMP.

      Menschliche Zellen umprogrammieren

      Auch der Mensch verfügt über Fibroblasten - eine Wunderheilung wie beim Axolotl bringen sie allerdings nicht zustande. Stattdessen verwandeln sie sich bei Verletzungen in sogenannte Myofibroblasten, die Narbengewebe bilden. "Es wäre natürlich toll, wenn wir auch menschliche Zellen so umprogrammieren könnten, dass sie ihren embryonalen Arm-Entwicklungsprozess wiederholen können", sagt Gerber.

      Bis dahin sei es aber noch ein weiter Weg. Denn noch wissen die Forscher nicht, welche Gene für die erstaunliche Regenerationsfähigkeit sorgen. Selbst wenn Menschen also theoretisch die Fähigkeit hätten, Organe, Gliedmaßen oder Sinneszellen nachwachsen zu lassen, kennen Forscher bislang den Schalter nicht, der den Prozess in Gang setzt.

      Im Video: Wie Schwanzlurche Wunden heilen
      Video abspielen... Video
      dpa

      Im Vergleich zum Menschen ist das Genom der Axolotl kompliziert. Mit 32 Milliarden Basenpaaren ist das Erbgut der Tiere mehr als zehnmal so groß wie das menschliche Genom. Erst vor Kurzem war es Forschern gelungen, es zu entschlüsseln.

      Dabei entdeckten sie mehrere Gene, die nur beim Axolotl und anderen Amphibienarten vorkommen und in regenerierendem Gewebe aktiv sind. Ein wichtiges und weit verbreitetes Entwicklungsgen namens PAX3 fehlte dagegen; dessen Funktion übernimmt beim Axolotl ein verwandtes Gen namens PAX7. Beide Gene spielen eine Schlüsselrolle bei der Entwicklung von Muskeln und Nerven.
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      Trotz ihrer erstaunlichen Fähigkeit zur Regeneration gelten Axolotl als vom Aussterben bedroht. Mittlerweile leben mehr Exemplare in Labors als in der Natur. Ein erwachsener Axolotl ist milchweiß, olivgrün oder schwarz und kann bis zu 20 Jahre alt werden.

      Sie verbringen ihr ganzes Leben im Larvenstadium. Das heißt im Gegensatz zu den allermeisten Amphibien werden sie geschlechtsreif, ohne vorher eine Metamorphose zu durchlaufen. Vier Mal im Jahr legen Axolotl bis zu 1500 Eier.

      koe"
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      schrieb am 03.10.18 02:29:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.826 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.858.068 von Popeye82 am 03.10.18 01:11:46
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      schrieb am 08.10.18 15:07:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.831 ()
      world's FIRST country to impose biofuel requirements on airlines

      www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/10/06/norway-first-count…



      www.Norwegen.com
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      schrieb am 09.10.18 16:12:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1.832 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.895.268 von Popeye82 am 08.10.18 15:07:52
      www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/10/08/of-flying-peaches-…
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      schrieb am 09.10.18 16:51:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.833 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.907.283 von Popeye82 am 09.10.18 16:12:42world’s FIRST commercial flight on fuel made from waste carbon gases; Now, will policy get the framework right for global deployment






      www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2018/10/02/should-we-can-we-w…
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      schrieb am 10.10.18 07:34:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.834 ()

      www.popsci.com/drunk-animals-evolution?CMPID=ene100918
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      schrieb am 05.11.18 19:10:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.850 ()

      http://news.bio-based.eu/beschraenkung-von-einwegkunststoffe…
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      schrieb am 06.11.18 07:25:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.851 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.085.854 von Popeye82 am 29.10.18 17:29:11
      www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/208251/symphony-…
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      schrieb am 07.11.18 15:04:26
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      schrieb am 15.11.18 04:40:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.857 ()
      MEET Methuselah






      www.livescience.com/64081-birthday-for-oldest-fish-in-captiv…
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      schrieb am 15.11.18 05:40:40
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      schrieb am 30.11.18 01:48:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.865 ()




      https://futurism.com/the-byte/galaxy-orbiting-milky-way?utm_…
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      schrieb am 30.11.18 09:12:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.866 ()




      www.livescience.com/64189-neanderthals-and-humans-interbreed…
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      schrieb am 30.11.18 20:51:14
      Beitrag Nr. 1.867 ()




      - VideoFromSpace
      Am 29.11.2018 veröffentlicht
      Using imagery and data from the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on the Mars Express orbiter, the DLR Institute of Planetary Research has created an animated flyover of Elysium Planitia, NASA InSight’s new home on Mars. -- Full Story: https://www.space.com/42573-mars-insi...

      Credit: DLR -
      www.space.com/42573-mars-insight-landing-site-flyover-video.…
      www.dlr.de/dlr/en/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-10081/151_read-3…
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      schrieb am 02.12.18 01:37:48
      Beitrag Nr. 1.869 ()

      www.sueddeutsche.de/panorama/brasilien-wo-termiten-seit-jahr…
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      schrieb am 04.12.18 18:40:10
      Beitrag Nr. 1.870 ()
      the fish, of the FUTURE




      www.bioeconomy.fi/the-fish-of-the-future-grows-ecologically-…
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      schrieb am 11.12.18 04:05:23
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      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 58.883.760 von Popeye82 am 06.10.18 03:56:57
      https://stockhead.com.au/tech/roots-is-proving-it-can-grow-e…
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      schrieb am 12.12.18 02:49:18
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      schrieb am 14.12.18 01:09:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1.883 ()
      my Love is PURE





      https://futurism.com/the-byte/planet-formation-images-alma?u…
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      schrieb am 14.12.18 01:23:40
      Beitrag Nr. 1.884 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.436.261 von Popeye82 am 14.12.18 01:09:54
      https://futurism.com/the-byte/treasure-trove-planets-hiding-…
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      schrieb am 14.12.18 03:39:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.885 ()
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      schrieb am 14.12.18 03:59:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.886 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.436.261 von Popeye82 am 14.12.18 01:09:54
      https://futurism.com/nasa-parker-solar-probe-closest-encount…
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.890 ()
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      schrieb am 18.12.18 23:45:12
      Beitrag Nr. 1.891 ()




      www.popsci.com/killer-asteroid-could-hit-earth?CMPID=ene2018…
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      schrieb am 26.12.18 07:11:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1.894 ()

      www.livescience.com/64305-biblical-era-jesus-discoveries-201…
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      schrieb am 27.12.18 22:15:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.895 ()




      www.popsci.com/earthrise-nasa-photo-apollo-50?cmpid=ene20181…
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      schrieb am 27.12.18 23:56:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.896 ()
      A “shitty present” - Journals made out of poo ­
      ­ ­ ­

      ­ ­ ­
      ­
      All papers everywhere are made from pulp mixtures derived from fiber materials - mostly wood fiber pulp from cut trees. An Asian-American company developed a special process to extract fibres from poo and create wonderful (non-smelling) paper products out of it.
      (picture: pixabay)

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      schrieb am 28.12.18 15:32:00
      Beitrag Nr. 1.897 ()
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      schrieb am 30.12.18 03:37:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.898 ()
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      schrieb am 30.12.18 04:34:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.899 ()







      www.livescience.com/64355-missing-ingredient-in-origin-of-li…


      "This May Be Life's 'Missing Ingredient'
      By Yasemin Saplakoglu, Staff Writer | December 28, 2018 08:55am ET

      0 0



      MORE

      This May Be Life's 'Missing Ingredient'
      Credit: NASA/U. S. Geological Survey/Norman Kuring/Kathryn Hansen




      Billions of years ago, molecules on a lifeless and tumultuous Earth mixed, forming the first life-forms. Eons later, a larger, smarter form of life is huddling over lab experiments trying to understand its own beginnings.

      While some say life emerged from simple chains of molecules, others say early chemical reactions formed self-replicating RNA. A relative of DNA, RNA acts as a decoder or messenger of genetic information. [7 Theories on the Origin of Life]

      A new study provides evidence for the RNA idea, which is known as the "RNA world hypothesis." But at least one ingredient in early RNA may differ from what's found in the modern form, a group of scientists reported on Dec. 3 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

      Modern RNA, alongside its sugar and phosphate backbone, is made of four main building blocks: nucleobases called adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and uracil (U).

      But it turns out that early RNA may have had one nucleobase that isn't part of the modern form.

      In tiny plastic tubes, the researchers put water, a little bit of salt, buffer to keep the pH basic and magnesium ions to speed up reactions. These conditions are similar to those found in a freshwater lake or pond, a crater lake, or the kind of lake or pool found in volcanic regions such as Yellowstone National Park — all places that life could have started.

      The researchers then added a small piece of RNA called a primer attached to a longer piece of RNA called a template. New RNA is made when a primer copies template RNA, through base pairing . The nucleobases uniquely match up with one another; C binds only with G, and A binds only with U.

      The researchers added the nucleobases (A, C, G and U) so they could bind to the template and thereby extend the shorter piece, the primer. Results showed that, with ingredients from modern RNA, the reaction didn't work fast enough for the RNA to form and replicate without errors.

      But then, the researchers added another chemical, called inosine, into the mix, instead of the guanine-based molecule. After that, the researchers were surprised to find that RNA could form and replicate slightly more accurately than it does in a mix with guanine.

      This mix didn't cause what's called an "error catastrophe," meaning that mutations or random mistakes in replications stayed below a threshold, ensuring they could be eliminated before accumulating.

      "The fact that [the addition of inosine] surmounts the problem of error catastrophe is an important test of [the molecule’s] significance," said David Deamer, a biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not part of the study. His only quibble is the claim that inosine is more plausible in the making of primitive RNA than other alternative bases, Deamer said. He doesn't yet think the other bases should be excluded, since "this is a fairly broad claim … based on a highly specific chemical reaction," Deamer told Live Science

      But because inosine can be easily derived from another base pair, adenine, it makes the process of originating life "easier" than if you had to make guanine from scratch, said John Sutherland, a researcher into the chemical origins of molecular biology at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in the U.K., who was not part of the study either.

      The findings break "the conventional wisdom that inosine couldn't have been useful," Sutherland told Live Science. Inosine had earned this reputation because it works a very specific job in a form of RNA called transfer RNA, which decodes genetic information.

      Inosine was thought to "wobble," or bind to various base pairs rather than a single one. That would have made it a poor molecule for giving unique instructions to form new RNA, because there wouldn't have been clear direction for what inosine could bind with. And so, "a lot of us had wrongly thought that [wobble] was an inherent property of inosine," Sutherland said. But this study showed that inosine, in the early world context where RNA first emerged, doesn't wobble, but instead pairs reliably with cytosine, he added.

      "It all makes sense now, but based on the older results, we didn't expect inosine to work as well as it did," said study senior author Jack Szostak, a professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Harvard University, who is also a Nobel laureate.

      Szostak and his team are now trying to figure out how else that primitive RNA might have been different from modern RNA — and how it eventually turned into modern RNA. Also, much of their lab is focused on how RNA molecules replicated before enzymes evolved. (Enzymes are proteins that speed up chemical reactions.)

      "This is a big challenge," Szostak told Live Science. "We've made a lot of progress, but there are still unsolved puzzles."

      Sutherland also noted that the field is generally moving on from a pure "RNA world hypothesis" into one that sees more components mixed into the cauldron that created life. Those include lipids, peptides, proteins and energy sources. He added that in researchers' minds, "It's a less purist RNA world than it used to be.""












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      schrieb am 01.01.19 05:51:11
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.902 ()

      www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2019/01/01/biofuels-mandates-…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 03.01.19 06:18:23
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      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.546.563 von Popeye82 am 03.01.19 06:05:08
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      schrieb am 11.01.19 11:43:00
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      www.news.de/video/850800856/exoplanet-k2-288bb-nasa-entdeckt…
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      schrieb am 14.01.19 12:15:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1.909 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.911 ()
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      schrieb am 18.01.19 05:51:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1.912 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.658.317 von Popeye82 am 18.01.19 05:04:14:eek:

      :eek:

      :eek:

      :eek:

      :eek:
      https://futurism.com/physicist-black-holes-portals-hyperspac…
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      schrieb am 23.01.19 13:23:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.913 ()
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      schrieb am 28.01.19 04:41:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.916 ()




      - A moon rock brought back by Apollo 14 astronauts in 1971 may contain a tiny piece of the ancient Earth (the "felsite clast" identified by the arrow).
      Credit: NASA/LPI/USRA/Bellucci et al. -
      www.livescience.com/64590-earth-oldest-rock-moon-apollo-14.h…
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      schrieb am 28.01.19 16:23:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.917 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.918 ()
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      schrieb am 02.02.19 17:10:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.919 ()

      http://web.de/magazine/wissen/weltraum/kuba-meteorit-blitz-l…
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      schrieb am 02.02.19 23:17:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.920 ()







      http://www.popsci.com/consent.php?redirect=https%3a%2f%2fwww…
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      schrieb am 08.02.19 21:29:17
      Beitrag Nr. 1.921 ()
      message TO the System
















      http://microgridknowledge.com/miramar-microgrid-landfill-was…
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      schrieb am 09.02.19 13:53:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.922 ()
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      schrieb am 09.02.19 17:33:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.923 ()
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      schrieb am 09.02.19 21:41:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.924 ()







      http://www.space.com/43267-milky-way-andromeda-collision-lat…
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      schrieb am 11.02.19 00:30:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.925 ()
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      schrieb am 12.02.19 09:09:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.927 ()
      11 Antworten
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      schrieb am 12.02.19 20:52:02
      Beitrag Nr. 1.928 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.849.206 von rv_2011 am 12.02.19 09:09:46World can get on the 1.5 C path for about a quarter of the cost of current fossil fuel subsidies
      _____________________________________________________________________





      3 Fragen.

      Eines der riesen Probleme der "fossils" ist eben dass da Eine riesige Lobby dranhängt.
      (die bezahlen ja schön Die Artikel mit Denen dann MousePotatoe/Nickelich(usw) gefüttert(korrekt: informiert(Wissens/BewusstseinserWEITERUNG)) werden:laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh: )
      Verstehe nicht richtig Wie Das erreichbar sein soll(und glaube auch nicht (mehr) Daran).
      Ist der Trick, Dieser Studie, jetzt wirklich ruckizucki auf 100%, Renewables/Erneuerbare, zu gehen? Umzuschwenken.

      2) Hältst du 100% für realistisch erreichbar?

      3) Was hältst Du von den Aussagen des Textes?


      p.S.
      Herr Picard, Stevguide, noch Andere, auch gern.
      9 Antworten
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      schrieb am 12.02.19 20:56:43
      Beitrag Nr. 1.929 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.849.206 von rv_2011 am 12.02.19 09:09:46
      ____________________________________________________________________________





      p.S.
      Diese Welt wäre schön.
      Ich WÜNSCHE Sie Mir.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 12.02.19 22:17:41
      Beitrag Nr. 1.930 ()


      - Understanding Climate Models, with Massimo Tavoni of EIEE

      Host Kristin Hayes talks with Massimo Tavoni, the director of the RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment and an associate professor at the School of Management of Politecnico di Milano in Milan, Italy. They discuss integrated assessment models, what they are, how they're used in studying climate change, and why they matter for decisionmaking. -
      http://soundcloud.com/resourcesradio/understanding-climate-m…
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      schrieb am 13.02.19 00:03:25
      Beitrag Nr. 1.931 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.856.955 von Popeye82 am 12.02.19 20:52:021. Die Studie geht davon aus, dass die Emissionen sehr schnell bis 2030 halbiert werden. Wenn die Senken (Ozean und Biomasse) dann immer noch so viel wie derzeit aufnehmen (also etwa 50% der gegenwärtigen Emissionen), würde der CO2-Gehalt dann erst mal konstant bleiben. Da die Senken dann weniger aufnehmen, müssten (um den CO2-Gehalt zu stabilisieren) die Emissionen bis 2050 langsam bis auf Null sinken. Zusätzlich soll es künstliche Senken geben (CCS?). Insgesamt soll nach diesem Szenario der CO2-Gehalt ab 2040 sinken, weil die natürlichen und künstlichen Senken mehr aufnehmen als emittiert wird.

      2. Der Starßenverkehr und Heizungen müssten dazu auf Strom (100% erneuerbar!) umgestellt werden.
      Da flüssige und gasförmige Brennstoffe nicht vollständig substituierbar sind (vor allen Flug- und Schiffsverkehr), müssten Biokraftstoffe und/oder synthetische Kraftstoffe eingesetzt werden, die mit überschüssiger Solar- und Windenergie aus CO2 und elekrolytisch erzeugtem Wasserstoff erzeugt werden (z.B. 4*H2+CO2->CH4+2*H2O).
      Nicht berücksichtigt wurde das Methan in der Atmosphäre, das für ca. 30% der Erwärmung verantwortlich ist. Auch die Methanemissionen (Landwirtschaft, Erdgas-Lecks) müssten gesenkt werden. Der Effekt wäre sehr schnell spürbar, weil Methan in der Atmosphäre schnell abgebaut wird.

      Ob das alles bis 2050 erreicht werden kann, ist zweifelhaft. Vor allem die Politik ist zu träge.
      Nach allen Erfahrungen sind technische Neuerungen in den USA sehr viel schneller (und bzgl. den betroffenen Arbeitskräften brutaler) durchsetzbar als z.B. bei uns. Der vogeschlagene "Green New Deal" wäre ein Weg dahin - wobei der derzeit nur von Teilen der demokratischen Partei unterstützt wird. Auch aus China gibt es positive Signale.

      Ob das wirklich so leicht finanzierbar ist, kann ich nicht beurteilen.

      Und vor allem: Zumindest vorübergehend würde der CO2-Gehalt weiter ansteigen. Ob dann die Erwärmung auf 1,5 Grad begrenzt werden kann, ist ungewiss; selbst bei konstantem CO2-Gehalt der Atmosphäre würde die Temperatur noch einige Zeit weiter steigen, vor allem wenn die SO2-Emissionen (Luftverschmutzung) sinken. Um die Temperatur bei 1,5°C zu halten bzw. zu senken, müsste der CO2-Gehalt wohl unter 400 ppm gesnkt werden (negative Emissionen).

      Aber: Wenn man mit dem Auto auf einen Stau zufährt und wahrscheinlich nicht mehr rechtzeitig anhalten kann, ist es trotzdem sinnvoll so schnell wie möglich zu bremsen, um den Aufprall zu dämpfen.
      8 Antworten
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      schrieb am 13.02.19 02:52:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.932 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.858.398 von rv_2011 am 13.02.19 00:03:25Ob das alles bis 2050 erreicht werden kann, ist zweifelhaft. Vor allem die Politik ist zu träge. Nach allen Erfahrungen sind technische Neuerungen in den USA sehr viel schneller (und bzgl. den betroffenen Arbeitskräften brutaler) durchsetzbar als z.B. bei uns. Der vogeschlagene "Green New Deal" wäre ein Weg dahin - wobei der derzeit nur von Teilen der demokratischen Partei unterstützt wird.
      ___________________________________________________________________





      Das ist die Sache mit der Ganzen GREEN Bewegung.

      Bewegen tut sich der Mensch erst wenn Er den Taler riecht.


      Deswegen, ich habe Es, mehrmehrmehrfach gesagt, Die Entwicklung Diverser (auch) ("Green")Technologien für extrem, extrem, extrem wichtig zu halten.
      Und in Diesem Zusammenhang dann auch den Punkt der "Parität".
      Wenn eben ein "Green"ansatz/Technologie Preis/leistungsseitig, mindestens, mit Vergleichbaren, Vorher gängigen Verfahren konkurieren kann.
      Teilweise sehen Wir das ja schon.

      Das Problem dabei ist/war,
      dass Das -Dieses GANZE "Green" Movement-
      im Prinzip wie Eine Art "Pflaster abziehen" funktioniert.
      Erstmal wird Es eh tun.
      Und Das auch Eine ganze Weile.

      Aber WENN man über Einen Gewissen Punkt drüber ist,
      dann werden irgendwann massiv, massiv, massiv Vorteile kommen.
      Die mit sich bringen.

      Im Zusammenhang mit Politikern, FUnktionären, Lobbyisten, auch den Bürgern, und Anderen,
      sehe ich eben vor Aaaaallem Das Problem, dass Die erstmal Das "Pflaster" sehen.

      WENN man SCHLAU wäre, würde man Es ruckzuck abreissen.

      Aber Das passiert nicht.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.02.19 06:31:11
      Beitrag Nr. 1.933 ()

      http://www.livescience.com/64743-oldest-motility-on-earth.ht…
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      schrieb am 14.02.19 15:23:30
      Beitrag Nr. 1.934 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.858.398 von rv_2011 am 13.02.19 00:03:25






      http://orf.at/stories/3111089/
      6 Antworten
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      schrieb am 14.02.19 19:38:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.935 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.874.544 von Popeye82 am 14.02.19 15:23:30Das Insektensterben (athropogen, aber nicht in erster Linie duch den Klimawandel verursacht) ist ein Menetekel. Nicht nur die Vögel, sondern auch durch Insekten bestäubte Pflanzen sind davon mittelbar betroffen.

      Der Ausgang des Bürgerbegehrens in Bayern zum Schutz der Wildbienen ist aber eine deutliche Aufforderung an die Poliik, endlich zu handeln.
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 17.02.19 16:19:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.936 ()




      http://newatlas.com/massive-mountain-ranges-earth-mantle/584…
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      schrieb am 17.02.19 16:54:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.937 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.938 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.939 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.940 ()
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      Beitrag Nr. 1.941 ()
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      schrieb am 18.02.19 05:59:33
      Beitrag Nr. 1.942 ()
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      schrieb am 18.02.19 13:46:29
      Beitrag Nr. 1.943 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.874.544 von Popeye82 am 14.02.19 15:23:30



      http://www.globalcitizen.org/de/content/bienensterben-was-du…
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      schrieb am 18.02.19 14:10:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.944 ()
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      schrieb am 19.02.19 23:21:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.945 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.877.175 von rv_2011 am 14.02.19 19:38:33
      http://newatlas.com/honeybee-hygiene-gene-study/58516/
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      schrieb am 20.02.19 03:21:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.946 ()
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      schrieb am 20.02.19 05:29:45
      Beitrag Nr. 1.947 ()
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      schrieb am 20.02.19 18:10:01
      Beitrag Nr. 1.948 ()
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      schrieb am 23.02.19 20:08:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.949 ()
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      schrieb am 24.02.19 21:07:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.950 ()
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      schrieb am 25.02.19 13:48:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1.951 ()
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      schrieb am 25.02.19 14:03:09
      Beitrag Nr. 1.952 ()
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      schrieb am 26.02.19 03:59:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.953 ()
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      schrieb am 26.02.19 12:47:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.954 ()
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      schrieb am 26.02.19 23:20:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.955 ()
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      schrieb am 27.02.19 03:38:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.956 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 27.02.19 19:01:20
      Beitrag Nr. 1.957 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.877.175 von rv_2011 am 14.02.19 19:38:33mit Biene Maja wirds ja nun Nix mehr, R.I.P., NEXT Thema


      RV,

      haben Sie auch EIne Meinung zu Der Meldung?
      http://newatlas.com/carbon-capture-co2-into-coal/58637/?utm_…
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      schrieb am 28.02.19 04:21:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.958 ()
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      schrieb am 01.03.19 00:47:47
      Beitrag Nr. 1.959 ()
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      schrieb am 01.03.19 01:41:41
      Beitrag Nr. 1.960 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.972.128 von Popeye82 am 27.02.19 03:38:49HOTTEST investment theme, on Earth

      http://www.livewiremarkets.com/wires/podcast-the-hottest-inv…
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      schrieb am 01.03.19 02:11:42
      Beitrag Nr. 1.961 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 01.03.19 22:59:16
      Beitrag Nr. 1.962 ()




      http://www.nnfcc.co.uk/news-uk-waste-strategy?mc_cid=96ece8a…
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      schrieb am 02.03.19 14:56:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.963 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.991.904 von Popeye82 am 01.03.19 02:11:42
      http://futurism.com/the-byte/planet-nine-five-times-earths-m…
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      schrieb am 02.03.19 21:52:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.964 ()
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      schrieb am 03.03.19 13:25:50
      Beitrag Nr. 1.965 ()
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      schrieb am 05.03.19 02:51:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.966 ()
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      schrieb am 05.03.19 09:11:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.967 ()

      http://www.livescience.com/64902-giant-newfound-medusavirus-…
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      schrieb am 08.03.19 23:03:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.968 ()
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      schrieb am 09.03.19 01:24:08
      Beitrag Nr. 1.969 ()
      2 Antworten
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      schrieb am 09.03.19 02:01:26
      Beitrag Nr. 1.970 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.056.966 von Popeye82 am 09.03.19 01:24:08
      http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/07/plastic-produced-…
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      schrieb am 09.03.19 02:47:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.971 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.056.966 von Popeye82 am 09.03.19 01:24:08
      http://www.startupnews.com.au/2019/03/06/algae-tech-pitches-…
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      schrieb am 09.03.19 19:27:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.972 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 59.874.544 von Popeye82 am 14.02.19 15:23:30
      http://derstandard.at/2000098952321/Forscher-beziffern-kuenf…
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 14.03.19 04:00:11
      Beitrag Nr. 1.973 ()

      http://www.livescience.com/64969-whale-almost-swallows-man.h…
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      schrieb am 16.03.19 21:40:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.974 ()
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      schrieb am 17.03.19 04:15:14
      Beitrag Nr. 1.975 ()

      http://www.livescience.com/65005-black-hole-halo-drive-laser…
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      schrieb am 21.03.19 14:43:56
      Beitrag Nr. 1.976 ()
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      schrieb am 21.03.19 15:05:28
      Beitrag Nr. 1.977 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.03.19 20:50:22
      Beitrag Nr. 1.978 ()
      Congo’s miners dying to feed world’s hunger for electric cars





      Exploited by Chinese firms, workers as young as nine risk their lives to feed the world’s growing hunger for cobalt.

      https://www.thetimes.co.uk/my-articles/congos-miners-dying-t…
      4 Antworten
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      schrieb am 22.03.19 01:49:37
      Beitrag Nr. 1.979 ()
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      schrieb am 22.03.19 19:35:18
      Beitrag Nr. 1.980 ()
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      schrieb am 23.03.19 00:03:37
      Beitrag Nr. 1.981 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.165.624 von mouse_potato am 21.03.19 20:50:22Denken Sie dass "Wir" Eine ("Art") HISTORISCHE "Schuld" haben gegenüber (So) Einigen Entwicklungs-, afrikanischen Ländern, basierend auf Der Kolonialzeit ??


      Ich spreche nicht, Geeinzelt, von Deutschland.
      Mehr "Westliche Welt", Industrienationen, Sowas vielleicht.
      3 Antworten
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      schrieb am 23.03.19 01:11:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.982 ()
      1 Antwort
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      schrieb am 23.03.19 18:36:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.983 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.177.114 von Popeye82 am 23.03.19 01:11:05
      http://www.digitalityworks.com/Viewers/ViewIssue.aspx?IssueI…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.19 20:07:19
      Beitrag Nr. 1.984 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.176.997 von Popeye82 am 23.03.19 00:03:37Ich bin nicht sicher.

      Ich würde allerdings schon sagen dass wir so oder so helfen sollten diesen Ländern ebensolchen Wohlstand zu ermöglichen wie wir ihn geniessen. Eine historische Begründung ist in meinen Augen nicht nötig.
      2 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.19 21:51:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.985 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.19 22:17:13
      Beitrag Nr. 1.986 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.180.246 von mouse_potato am 23.03.19 20:07:19Ich finde Es auch GUT einfach mal zu sagen: Ich "bin nicht sicher".


      Vollkommen Gute Antwort in Meinen Augen.
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.03.19 03:43:23
      Beitrag Nr. 1.987 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.03.19 03:45:15
      Beitrag Nr. 1.988 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.180.702 von Popeye82 am 23.03.19 22:17:13FES
      http://wiki.tfes.org/Flat_Earth_Society
      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.03.19 14:14:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.989 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.060.284 von Popeye82 am 09.03.19 19:27:32
      http://www.spektrum.de/news/zwei-drittel-weniger/1632504
      Avatar
      schrieb am 27.03.19 19:28:27
      Beitrag Nr. 1.990 ()
      Joe Oliver: The climate alarmists are keeping poor people in the dark — literally

      It is impossible to elevate people in dire need to a decent standard of living without inexpensive electricity



      https://business.financialpost.com/opinion/joe-oliver-the-cl…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 30.03.19 13:47:06
      Beitrag Nr. 1.991 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 30.03.19 14:26:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.992 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 31.03.19 13:07:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.993 ()

      - PLANET SLOW MO S1 • E10 Part 1
      Lichtgeschwindigkeit mit 100 Milliarden Bildern pro Sekunde filmen
      3.612.720 Aufrufe
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      The Slow Mo Guys
      Am 27.03.2019 veröffentlicht
      Was ist das Schnellste, das die Menschheit kennt? Gav und Dan versuchen, das zu filmen.

      Klickt hier, um euch bei YouTube Premium anzumelden und Zugang zu weiteren YouTube Original Serien, Dokumentationen, Specials und Filmen zu bekommen.
      Kategorie
      Unterhaltung -
      http://www.livescience.com/65113-fastest-camera-captures-spe…
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 31.03.19 15:02:49
      Beitrag Nr. 1.994 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.239.460 von Popeye82 am 31.03.19 13:07:59
      - Wie filmt man Lichtgeschwindigkeit?????????????????????????????????????????? -
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.04.19 04:39:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.995 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.04.19 13:31:41
      Beitrag Nr. 1.996 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.04.19 01:27:05
      Beitrag Nr. 1.997 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.04.19 17:37:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.998 ()
      Child Mortality
      by Max Roser

      Since the beginning of the age of the Enlightenment the mortality of children has declined rapidly. Child mortality in rich countries today is much lower than 1%. This is a very recent development and was only reached after a hundredfold decline in child mortality in these countries. In early-modern times, child mortality was very high; in 18th century Sweden every third child died, and in 19th century Germany every second child died. With declining poverty and increasing knowledge and service in the health sector, child mortality around the world is declining very rapidly: Global child mortality fell from 18.2% in 1960 to 4.3% in 2015; while 4.3% is still too high, this is a substantial achievement....






      https://ourworldindata.org/child-mortality

      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.04.19 21:51:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.999 ()
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.04.19 21:54:00
      Beitrag Nr. 2.000 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 60.349.042 von mouse_potato am 13.04.19 17:37:31TOP!!
      Ich glaube auch(??) an den Fortschritt.
      Und dass Das Leben eigentlich besser wird.
      Auch wenn Einem Das Heute oft "eeeeeher schwer gemacht wird".
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