Green Batteries: past, present, future
In life it's always good to have a back-up plan, an alternative course of action in case the primary one goes sour. The same...
Green energy device patents
Disintegrating polystyrene
Foam polystyrene is a major environmental concern. It is used as a protective packaging for all sorts of products, but it is not...
A nuclear fusion project approved to go
Reproducing the power of the sun on Earth is no easy task, but an international team of physicists based in Europe is now preparing...
Hydrogen from Salt Water: an Accidental Discovery
63-year-old John Kanzius was looking to destroy cancer cells when he stumbled upon an effect that split salt water and released oxygen and hydrogen.
His invention...
An Engine Fueled by Hydrogen Obtained from Water
Ex-President Bush has made a challenge to the American people to begin running cars on hydrogen as soon as possible, and has allocated over...
How to build a Joe cell free energy device
(Copyright 1998-2005 Educate-Yourself and Ken Adachi. All rights reserved)
By Ken Adachi (Ken Adachi, Editor)
http://educate-yourself.org/fe/fejoewatercell.shtml
An Australian man, only identified by the name of Joe...
The Latest innovations in solar powered hydrogen production
Scientists at the US Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have developed new ways to make or to modify nanorods and nanotubes of...
Solar Power Gets Cheaper (video)
There have been many trends posted involving solar power but in the US it still only accounts for 1% of the electricity generated. Even...
Minesotta turning biomass into hydrogen
An efficient, super-fast new method of turning waste biomass into hydrogen has been developed by scientists in Minnesota, US. The researchers say it could...
Geothermal power – hot energy right under our feet
Converting geothermal heat into electricity by pouring water onto hot rocks underground and using the steam to turn turbines is arguably the most promising - and renewable - source of "green" energy on the planet. So concludes the MIT experts' report, released on Monday, which examines what geothermal energy could do for the US in the 21st century.






























