Sunday, November 23, 2008 | 8:37 a.m.

Today's Green Minute by Jim Parks

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    A new UN survey says that big firms like General Electric and Procter & Gamble have, in their search for new ideas, been turning in greater numbers to Mother Nature. Janine Benyus, of the Biomimicry Guild (that wrote the report), points out that …

  • Green Gizmos
    Black & Decker invented the first portable electric drill in 1917, and the company is still ahead of the curve. It's introduced three smart gizmos to lighten homeowners' impact on Mother Earth — and save them a few bucks along the way. The …

  • Algae Crude
    When oil prices soar to places they've never risen to before, unconventional sources of energy become ... well, less unconventional. Consider the recent attention given to the lowly algae, and its ability to make fats. The fats can be made into …

  • Chinese Methane
    The phrase "canary in a coalmine" comes from the age-old practice of placing a caged canary in a mine to detect explosive gases; the canary's death was a signal for miners to evacuate. The unfortunate death signaled methane gas. While the …

Home Energy Bank

People who use solar energy systems to power their houses can watch their electric meters slow, stop or even run backward when the sun shines. But when the sun goes down, the power decreases. Now an MIT professor, Daniel Nocera, has developed a fuel cell that "banks" solar energy and makes electricity 24/7.

Fuel cells and batteries are alike in that they produce no greenhouse gases, but batteries store electrical energy in a closed system that eventually runs out. Fuel cells have the advantage of running indefinitely as long as certain materials (in this case, hydrogen and oxygen) are present.
The hydrogen-oxygen reaction has always required hi-tech containment because it's highly corrosive, but the Nocera's new system was demonstrated using only a glass jar.

He says the process is cheap, efficient and easy to manufacture. The system is made from abundant materials.

And we love this part: Nocera was inspired by nature's own strategy for storing energy from the sun.

Questions can be sent to Jim Parks at jrparks@mac.com. To find out more about Jim Parks and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Originally Published on Monday September 15, 2008

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