I once owned one of the original Moulton small-wheeled folding bikes. It was the only new bike I’ve ever had; all the others were second-hand – less likely to be stolen. I rode my Moulton to work in Leeds for several years and it never disappointed me. I can imagine the owners of the Sven Cycles… Continue reading
Browsing Category Green Technology
Could the self-driving bus save rural public transport?
There is a long-term future for rural bus services in Britain, but it doesn’t involve humans, or at least human drivers. A BBC story today (February 4, 2016) dwells on the risk of services in England and Wales being “wiped out” by council budget cuts. The Campaign for Better Transport said public subsidies to bus… Continue reading →
UK company’s zero-emission “clean cold” engine keep goods cool in intransit
Anyone out on the roads of the UK, or the rest of Europe or North America today, will see enormously polluting vehicles. I don’t mean the common petrol or diesel-powered car. I’m referring to those many, often anonymous looking, vans carrying perishable goods. Until I received a press release about a British company with what… Continue reading →
BA drops plan to power flights with municipal rubbish
Just three weeks after the world’s governments signed a deal to cut Co2 emissions to slow global warming, BA has announced that it has been forced to mothball a project to create 16m gallons of jet fuel from London’s rubbish every year. It cites a number of reasons, (speaking to the Guardian) including low crude oil prices,… Continue reading →
A night on the kinetic tiles helps power African football pitch
Tiles that generate electricity when players step on them are providing some of the energy to floodlight a football pitch in Nigeria. The rest of the power comes from solar panels. The facility, at the Federal College of Education in Lagos, is described as Africa’s first human and solar powered football pitch. Around 90 under-pitch… Continue reading →
Pavegen’s footstep energy advance “faster than solar”
The advances made in the pioneering technology of footstep energy has been much more rapid than the progress in solar power when it was starting up, according to the CEO of Pavegen, a UK company at the leading edge of the (kinetic harvesting) business. (Another story by me on Pavegen – here.) Laurence Kemball-Cook,… Continue reading →