water

Here Comes the Ocean (and the Triumph of Slime)

060119_jellyfish.jpgClimate change is causing the sea to rise far faster than expected, potentially a meter or more by 2100. Perhaps that doesn't seem so dire to you. Perhaps you read that sentence and think: "Pity; there go some beaches and beach-front real estate." Maybe you think: "You know, I've always liked the ocean more than New York City anyway..."

Biofuel Blindspot?

biofuels.jpgBiofuels have been hyped as the answer to global warming, as "fuel for the revolution," and as a way to prevent the predicted catastrophe of "peak oil collapse." They've also been blamed for driving up food prices and contributing to global warming (in some instances, at a greater level than traditional fossil-based fuels).

The darling has become dastardly, at least judging by recent media coverage.

(Nearly) Free Water!

180px-Kamen_still.jpgLast week on the Colbert Report, a guy named Dean Kamen demonstrated a water purifying machine that promises, he says, to provide clean, drinkable water, at low cost, and from virtually any liquid source.

"Puddles!" he said; "The ocean!" he said.

"Doritos!" exclaimed Colbert, before dumping some extreme-flavored Doritos into the machine. The segment didn't last long enough to find out if the chips would indeed yield clean drinkable water.

Syndicate content