Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Podcast #53: US power plants, Farm in a box + Great Barrier Reef



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. US Environmental Protection Agency's bid to curb emissions from power plants
  2. Inventor in Kenya wants everyone to become farmers
  3. My web picks
  4. UNESCO and Leonardo DiCaprio warn Australia over Great Barrier Reef
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here

The Smallest Farm in the World
Satao - A Legend (Mark Deeble)
Armadillo of the World cup (BBC - Science in Action)

Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Farm in a box

An inventor in Kenya has come up with a farm kit he claims can grow enough plants and livestock to feed a family in a space the size of a small car.

The 'aquaponic' system combines growing beds with a tank for rearing edible fish or shrimps. The two systems work in harmony using minimal amounts of energy and water.

If this sounds like the stuff of science fiction, its creator assures me the idea has been around for centuries and is beguilingly simple. That said, he has little doubt about its potential to revolutionise the way food is produced in the future.

I meet Heino Dahmen in a sprawling garage on the outskirts of the port city of Mombasa. He has run this business and an adjoining shipyard on the Mtwapa Creek for 20 years, but now devotes almost all his time to a bewildering array of engineering projects.


Saturday, 10 May 2014

Podcast #52: Japan whaling ban, Selling human waste + YearsOfLivingDangerously



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. What does the ban on Japan's Antarctic whaling mean?
  2. Selling sewage to help boost sanitation in Kenya
  3. My web picks
  4. Deal to start mining the sea bed in Papua New Guinea
  5. Reviews of the US documentary series Years of Living Dangerously

Friday, 25 April 2014

Human waste as fuel

Dried human waste could be the next big business opportunity in Sub-Saharan Africa as well as helping to flush out the problem of poor sanitation, according to a start-up in the coastal city of Mombasa.

Waste Enterprisers believes the "faecal sludge" found in pit latrines and septic tanks could be used as industrial fuel in place of imported coal and other biofuels. 

The company's CEO, Dr Ashley Muspratt, said that dried waste has been shown to burn at least as well as coffee husks and palm nut shells in tests. Unlike these more common biofuels, there is a plentiful local supply of sewage all year round. 

"I like to talk about what we're doing as replacing [sewage] treatment plants with factories. When you talk about factories you're talking about bringing in a raw material and putting out a value-added product," Dr Muspratt said. 

A pile of dried sludge in Kampala (Moritz Gold / SANDEC)

Saturday, 12 January 2013

Podcast #41: Aussie bushfires, A setback for Shell's Arctic drilling plans + Your chance to be an astronaut



 This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Bushfires engulf southern Australia
  2. Beached Kulluk drilling platform proves a major headache for Shell
  3. Report: Half of the food produced on Earth is wasted
  4. Transocean to plead guilty over Gulf oil spill
  5. Kenya's largest ivory poaching massacre
  6. Lake Ellsworth team downs tools
  7. Ghana bans imports of fridges
  8. Record price paid for bluefin tuna in Japan
  9. Wanted: Volunteers to colonise Mars
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here