The aluminum-air batteries are changed every 2500km
Aluminum (also from used cans) and non-polluting electrolytes. Every 2500km you change them in 90 seconds and they recycle. Aluminum-air batteries? A bomb.
Aluminum (also from used cans) and non-polluting electrolytes. Every 2500km you change them in 90 seconds and they recycle. Aluminum-air batteries? A bomb.
Travel in time and experience a November day in Italy in 2050, from North to South. Here's what you'll see in one case or another.
The “oil” narrative is coming to an end. Peak oil forecasts will be seen lower, and the real shift in renewables will begin as early as this decade.
Glowee creates biological light without electricity: it means less pollution from nuclear and coal, it means reduced environmental impact with natural substances.
Surfactants are everywhere: detergents, toothpastes, paint, makeup, etc. A natural surfactant eliminates harmful substances from all these products
Plastic roads are four times lighter in structure than asphalt, assemble like LEGO and turn waste into recyclable resources.
Bittersweet news for vegetarians, vegans and pescatarians: UK research shows their diet has less risk of coronary heart disease. But there's more.
Each phase of the process is natural and gives life to biodegradable, fireproof, waterproof and recyclable products. Pine needles: aesthetic and ecological triumph.
Buckminster Fuller's ideas see the light after 70 years thanks to more accessible materials. The world is ready to live under bioceramic domes.
Adidas has revealed to the world Loop, its 100% recyclable shoe, an "infinite" shoe that, once discarded, can be disassembled and completely put back into circulation. A shoe that literally lasts a lifetime (and beyond). The name is eloquent: Loop. An infinite circle, which gives a good idea. It was created by a special division of Adidas, FutureCraft, which is responsible for totally innovating the German giant's footwear. Over the years, FutureCraft has introduced printed customizations… Read more
The political efforts made, including cuts to new coal power plants and the closure of mines, are bearing the expected results: solar energy in China costs less and less.
BioUrban 2.0 artificial trees can make a difference in areas traveled by pedestrians, cyclists or the elderly, where planting trees is not possible.
Vaporizing waste does not create methane as in landfills, but reusable carbon monoxide and hydrogen. And unlike an incinerator, it has no emissions.
We can stem the food crisis by working hard on eight factors that have worsened and strengthened the weaknesses in our system. Here are what they are.
Driving everything with voice and immersing yourself in the Internet of Things will be routine. Thanks to advances in AI, a smart home will anticipate our needs.
Soapack is a vegetable oil-based soap packaging mixed with mineral pigments, plants and flowers that dissolves only when its contents run out.
A team has created a method of de-printing the sheets that works with the normal paper already on the market and present in all homes and offices.
In the magazine of the Royal Society of Medicine, Prof. John Ashton proposes green burials on streets and urban areas against the collapse of English cemeteries.
In 2010, scientists observed that pollution would cause global warming of 1,3°C. Today's data is just a consequence.
Even in the UK the hydrogen train starts running. How is development going in the rest of the world? Let's take stock with this article.
Consider a small industrial supply chain and find that producing 100 times more emissions than previously estimated is actually the most polluting sector, triple that of all the others combined