Placeholder canvas

How An Australian Inventor Is Working Towards A Green & Clean Planet

Date:

10 years ago, Australian inventor Saul Griffith wanted to show the world how much a person’s individual choices can affect the planet.

At a TED talk, he displayed a huge audit of his personal energy impact, calculating the carbon footprint of every action in his life down to his underwear, toilet paper and taxes.

The founder of a wind power company and a dedicated bicycle commuter, Griffith was ashamed to discover that he was consuming much more power than the average American.

Griffith’s San Francisco lab has attracted $100 million in capital from investors and spun out a dozen companies.

The 47-year-old has won  MacArthur “genius” grant in 2007 for his prodigious inventions “in the global public interest,” from novel household water-treatment systems to an educational cartoon series for kids.

He has spent the last ten years working on a technological answer to climate change, and his proposal is mass electrification.

Griffith’s environmentalist beliefs began when he was a child. Family holidays when Griffith and his sister were growing up consisted of driving across the continent in an old Land Rover loaded with photography gear, visiting secluded islands, and swimming with turtles. His mother is a printer and wildlife artist, and his father is a retired professor.

While most environmentalists are targeting the fossil fuel sector, Griffith wants to decarbonize every home in the United States. Efforts to achieve net-zero carbon emissions will fall short unless this is done.

Otherlab, which Griffith co-founded more than a decade ago, is where the Australian and two dozen other scientists are trying to find a way to stop global warming.

One of the lab’s current studies involves completely rethinking offshore wind platforms.

Another group is working on a solar-powered scooter that will be released this year. They also devised a tracker device to aid solar panels in following the direction of the sun throughout the day.

Whereas many environmentalists see the world as doom and gloom, Griffith sees climate change as solvable and envisions a cleaner future that is better than what we have now.

Otherlab’s initiatives have received funding from the Advanced Research Laboratory of the US Department of Energy, the US Navy, and NASA.

Griffith has put together a diverse team for the job. Huang was a competitive snowboarder, and Von Clemm was a former ski instructor.

He’s also conducting tests on his own home, which is located south of Sydney. To store the excess electricity from his home’s experimental solar panels, he built a six-foot-tall cedar-clad hot tub in his yard.

Click here for Latest News updates and viral videos on our AI-powered smart news

For viral videos and Latest trends subscribe to NewsMobile YouTube Channel and Follow us onInstagram

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

IPL 2024: Chasing Mounting Total, LSG Succumb To KKR Bowling Attack, Concede 98-Run Defeat

With the massive against the Lucknow-based franchise, KKR moved to the top of the table with 16 points and a net run rate of +1.453

Israel Shuts Down Local Al Jazeera Offices In The Country 

Al Jazeera said the accusation that it threatened Israeli security was a “dangerous and ridiculous lie” that put its journalists at risk

IPL 2024: Narine’s Explosive Fifty, Salt, Ramandeep Cameos Guide KKR To 235/6 Against LSG

Phil Salt started the assault by smashing Marcus Stoinis for two boundaries on the first two balls of the innings

UK: Labour Party Wins Key Mayoral Polls In A Fresh Blow To PM Sunak

These victories, which mark Labour's most recent in Thursday's local elections for mayors and councils, may encourage more calls for Sunak to resign as prime minister of the United Kingdom