U-tube videos from Copenhagen www.cop15.panda.org
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Radio Shropshire have been discussing Climate Change. Have your say. http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/shropshire/hi/people_and_places/nature/newsid_8373000/8373697.stm
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Can we be self-sufficient? http://www.channel4.com/food/features/eat-ethically/can-we-ever-be-self-sufficient_p_1.html
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10 things you can do to reduce your carbon footprint - 10:10 campaign
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/oct/10/10-10-tips-greener-life
Shropshire Hills newsletter Autumn 2009 |
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Great ideas listed in New Scientist - maybe there's hope yet!
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Interesting initiative - videos from around the world. www.thelifeline.tv
ReaVEN has submitted a bid for funding to help pay for a feasibility study into restoring the old railway from Shrewsbury to Minsterley as a green cycleway and footpath. Could you respond with letters of support? |
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Straw is considered an
environmentally friendly building material as it is renewable and a
by-product
of farming.
Researchers
at the University
of Bath are studying straw as a potential eco-friendly building
material.
The “BaleHaus” is a project of the University’s
BRE Center
for Innovative Construction Materials in their continued research into
low
carbon alternatives to current building materials.
Straw is considered an environmentally-friendly building material as it
is
renewable and a by-product of farming. Because straw comes from crops,
which
absorb carbon as they grow, straw can be seen as having zero or even
negative
carbon footprint.
The BRE Centre also has a similar project involving the use of hemp-lime construction materials which are also said to have a zero carbon footprint.
The BaleHaus is to is to be constructed using “ModCell,” which are prefabricated panels consisting of a wooden structural frame filled with straw bales or hemp and rendered with a breathable lime-based system.
Because of the straw’s high insulating properties, it is believed that the BaleHaus and other similarly-made structures will need almost no conventional heating systems, keeping running costs low and minimizing environmental impact.
The structure is to be constructed on campus and is expected to stand two stories high when it is completed in the late summer. It will be monitored for a year to test its insulating properties, humidity levels, air tightness, and sound insulation qualities.
ModCell is the creation of White Design in Bristol and Integral Structural Design in Bath . Other partners on the research project are Agrifibre Technologies, Lime Technology, Eurban, the Centre for Window & Cladding Technology, and Willmott Dixon.==================================================================
Modern twist to the Darwin story |
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Telegraph report on oil crisis http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/warning-oil-supplies-are-running-out-fast-1766585.html
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Sainsbury's in Bridgenorth are donating surplus food to a nearby farm to feed animals. The Oswestry branch is seeking charities to donate food to.
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Alternative car using compressed air
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Harpur Adams have been given funding for an AD plant.
http://www.harper-adams.ac.uk/press/article.cfm?ID=2937
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http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/how-green-are-our-valleys-ndash-welcome-to-nowaste-wales-1674387.htmlHow green are our valleys – welcome to no-waste Wales An ambitious scheme aims to make one village in the principality the first place in Britain where absolutely everything is recycled
Sunday, 26 April 2009
Ms Summers and the residents of St Arvans, Gwent, are at the forefront of a radical green project that began in this sleepy Welsh village, and which now looks set to be rolled out across the country.
On Wednesday the Welsh Assembly will announce ambitious new plans for Wales to become a "zero waste" nation by 2050, in a radical strategy that aims to see 70 per cent of waste recycled by 2025.
Wales is already ahead of the rest of the UK in the green league. Last year, St Arvans became the first sero-wastraff (zero waste) village, with the aim that everything thrown out by the 250 houses – from food waste to phone batteries and printer cartridges – will be recycled by 2020. Residents are careful to buy only things that can be repaired, reused or recycled.
"Subconsciously, we all feel a bit guilty about the waste we create, so it makes us feel better to do something about it," said Mrs Summers. "The next stage is to extend the scheme to include other areas around St Arvans. I have friends who want to be part of it and bring their rubbish over to me here to be recycled," she added.
If Wales is to achieve its new targets, a zero-waste scheme will have to be rolled out on a huge scale. To achieve this, the Welsh Assembly aims to set up new recycling infrastructure across the country, offer advice to businesses on how they can "go green" without incurring exorbitant costs, and capitalise on new green jobs and business opportunities.
"I believe this is the most ambitious recycling plan among all the administrations of the UK. More recycling and less waste will make Wales greener and sustainable," said Jane Davidson, minister for the environment, sustainability and housing. "What we do with our waste reflects how we treat our country and planet. We can no longer simply bury waste in the land to rot. We need to act now for the sake of our country. Will we be able to look our grandchildren in the eye and say we did all we could to protect where they live?"
The zero-waste strategy in Wales is much more radical than England's recycling targets, which are to recycle 40 per cent of all household waste by 2010, rising to 50 per cent by 2020. However, the Department for Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra) has not ruled out following Wales's lead in future.
"The waste strategy for England already sets ambitious targets. The targets for Wales are for a longer period ahead, and in England we shall be considering in due course what targets to set for later periods," said a spokesperson for Defra.
"It is not only our environment that will benefit," said Ms Davidson, "but also our economy. There are tremendous opportunities to save money and create high-quality industry by using the valuable material resources contained in waste."
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A group of entrepreneurs have got together to produce a hydrogen fuelled car. See their press release here. |
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