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National Geographic explorer Thomas H. Iraq aspires for renewable and sustainable energy solutions
Coolan found out.
When you re-pack your food, it will only take a little extra time to put on your body armor and pass the security check
Garbage grinder, solar panel, water pump and biogas systems.
Culhane submitted the report from his trip to Iraq, a place for him to be the home of his grandfather, with personal significance: Earth Day is special for me.
On April 22, 1970, I celebrated the first festival, organized All My Children on the Dobbs Ferry near New York, and led the clean-up of the charity College woods and streams in my backyard.
At that time, they were dumping ground for garbage and phosphate in our apartment building, and they polluted the Hudson River near the downstream.
I am now a guest professor at the charity college in my former hometown, teaching environmental science, and the Hudson River Basin is now cleaner thanks to the efforts of the United StatesS.
Environmental law promulgated from the Earth Day movement.
I have spent this Earth Day, in fact, the entire "Earth Month" in April has been spent overseas in the Middle East, where the benefits of environmental thinking are becoming a priority and the issue has been recognized, and invited me to share the "solution" celebration.
My trip includes the US-sponsored road show on renewable energy and sustainable development. S.
Embassy in Iraq, embassy in Iraq and embassy in Erbil, Kurdistan, Iraq
Israel gas company in the Mediterranean Mikhmoret beach, National Geographic Society, Fox TV International and Bosch company in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir, Turkey.
This geographic whirlwind tour took me around nearly a dozen universities, ministries, embassies and delegations.
They include the United Nations and the United States. S.
The embassy compound of the Ministry of Science and Technology of Iraq and Marmara niffsett of Turkey, where we have built six fully functional creatures
Biogas digesters in handon workshops.
As a reward, travel begins and ends in a stop
Go to Germany to visit my family and cook organic food for them with the clean fuel that our household biogas system generates from kitchen waste. The road-
Show gives me the opportunity to share the techniques and practices I have studied and used at home in my university lab;
I find that any family and family can be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Thanks to America. S.
I was able to buy the embassy and bring a wide variety of homes on the road --
Environmental technology of scale, including my personal favorite: Food-
Garbage grinder donated by InSinkErator. (
You told them to dispose of the garbage;
I call it a biogas raw material preparation device that converts all kitchen waste into clean fuel and fertilizer! )
I also brought six solar cookers, two living devices, water purification equipment, foldable CIGS battery solar panels, 12-
V-water vacuum pump,
Mini Portable Chinook wind generator inverter
Bicycle generators, water, electricity and steam generators, 30-and 100-
Hydrogen fuel cell, high
Capacity LED light and wood vaporizer.
There is a conversion kit that allows the generator to run on biofuels, and the biogas system mold in China allows any community to easily and cheaply create their own efficient biogas system, convert all toilet and food waste into endless renewable energy and liquid compost to eliminate diseases caused by organic waste.
It takes planning and cooperation to get it.
Technically, one can see it and touch it instead of simply watching the picture on the screen.
In Turkey we cut some of our expenses a little, which means there is a car and a driver so we can ship the goodies in our suitcase from the lecture to the lecture, transport from airport to airport What do you think this thing is? Discussion.
After so many security checks, there is always an interesting opportunity to answer questions about suspicious
Items that cause eyebrows when viewed through x-ray.
I have got used to this, and over the years I have improvise on the borders of Turkey, India, Nepal, Israel and Egypt to learn environmental technology.
It turns out that many border guards and security professionals are very interested in getting to know the latest green technologies, and we always leave as friends, professor, and welcome you to our country, may God bless you and your work.
It is only in several cases that we have to ship certain items individually that cannot be carried on the plane or in our luggage.
In Iraq, we have received the same warm welcome and enthusiasm, but of course, the logistics of the transfer of technology and road show professors is completely different.
First, each venue (
Ministries and schools)
It must be coordinated in advance, but it must be kept confidential.
In addition to the coordinators of our Iraqi counterparts, no one outside the embassy can know in advance where we are going and no one knows what route we are on.
This is to prevent possible kidnappers or insurgents from attacking us.
Then we had to wear body armor and helmets.
Personal protective equipment, see picture)
Travel in armored vehicles.
Our vehicle, including me and Frank fenfer, spokesman for our embassy and cultural affairs officer, as well as the media coordinator, Victoria Reaper, and the department of economy, I had to take the convoy, there are two heavy armored support vehicles in front and two in the back, and all teams have huge antenna broadcast frequencies
Interference signal to destroy any radio signal intended to detonate an improvised explosive device (
Improvised Explosive Device.
All vehicles are equipped with heavily guarded, well trained armed soldiers or security professionals who will give their lives to me if anything happens and when we move into red zone, who keeps us focused on being vigilant and safe? Big Bus)
And walked out of the International Zone. âx80x9d (
It is also known as "green zone", "Green Zone" and "green zone", and its environment is getting greener due to the solar hot water vacuum tube on the new embassy housing building, as well as new biological treatment plants and organisms
We built biogas digesters in the gardens of the embassy and the US embassy. N. compound! )
Once we enter the venue (
(Such as Iraq Ministry of Science and Technology)
I have a security specialist in fbi clothes.
The headphones and the movement to carry the loaded weapons stand by me at any time while the other two constantly scan the horizon for trouble.
If I moved more than 1 m, he would gently but firmly remind me to keep me in my position, state where I want to move before moving my feet, and wait for the gap.
This includes going to the bathroom.
It's surreal, but it's also necessary: on April 15, the day we were supposed to travel to the sustainable development center of the Baghdad Polytechnic University, we were wearing bullet-proof clothes and the team was preparing, we get a report that a series of bomb blasts have taken place across the city as insurgents try to intimidate the Iraqi people into the upcoming elections.
We were told to suspend the mission, and television monitors began to show terrible statistics of the Holocaust and the number of casualties.
Finally, we had to give a lecture through a live video conference, but unfortunately we couldn't do it ourselves!
A brighter place is a visit to the Iraqi Ministry of Science and Technology. MOST).
After we built our family
Together with their engineers, they built a bio biogas digester of the size on the ground, and they introduced a series of great technologies that they were using, which surprised us: Solar vacuum tubes-
Auxiliary air conditioner, super bright LED street lamp, Iraq-
The photovoltaic panels made are different from the biogas systems we built and purchased.
The best thing is 10-
Wearing a headscarf and a white lab coat, female scientists powered the kilowatt-wood vaporizer, proving by loading a full sheet of wood from a woodworking floor and igniting an engine that burns so cleanly, we can't smell anything when we exhaust.
We also met with businessmen from the renewable energy industry in Iraq, as well as the Minister of Electricity, who showed me data from 15 new large enterprises
Expand solar and wind farms nationwide and show me a map of their new micro farm
Water and electricity facilities.
We have an obligation to make our traditional fuel infrastructure work well, they say, but at the same time we are pursuing a variety of renewable energy sources.
We just need to raise the awareness of the public, that's why we really appreciate what you're doing here, and the small-
A technical gift of scale provided to us by your embassy.
Most people's Dhia Shopee said that our goal now is to get a travel sustainable roadshow truck to the community with the news of these technologies.
Once they see that these things are working and put their hands on them, we will take the next step, he said.
According to my colleague Dr. , the next step
From the Sustainable Development Center of the Baghdad Polytechnic University, mukard al Hatib is the place to choose the community to be passionate about what they see at the roadshow, then invest money and expertise to help them develop what Mukden says is sustainable neighborhood life, breathing, Functional Ecology
The community that implements best practice model technology is not for demonstration, but for daily life.
All the Iraqis we met were very practical.
Thoughtful survivors struggling with the continuing difficulties of power outages and municipal service outages convey the message that seeing is true.
We don't just want to talk about these solutions, we want to try and live with them and see how much we can count on them.
This is the theme of roadshow and Sustainable Neighborhood Initiative.
On 17 and April 16, I went to the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq to hold workshops for staff and assess the energy, water and waste challenges facing the entire compound.
The goal is to help them green the "blue" initiative that is spreading to other states. N.
The mission around the world is the result of the hard work of the United States. N.
Humanitarian Affairs officer Karin Mayer
They agreed that turning waste into energy and fertilizer was the best core approach to make the composite safer and more sustainable, and we started building two 2-cubic-meter bio-
Biogas digesters are the first biogas digesters in Baghdad, after determining the amount of food and cafeteria waste generated by the kitchen, how much irrigation water they use, and the space to grow food.
It's just a start because Noel Park, one of their chief engineers, once built farm creatures
His hometown is a biogas digester in the Philippines.
After these workshops, we can start here, he said.
As you explain and show, this city creature
The Digester solution is simple.
We just don't know that food waste is the best raw material, we can grind it easily with InSinkErator and feed it to a simple Marsh made of a local water tank now we know
I was invited to present all the roadshow solutions at a dinner in the USN.
Ambassadors and dignitaries from Iraq, Europe and the United States came to discuss the green garden of the United States. N.
And the greening of Iraq.
Thanks to the hard work of humanitarian affairs officer karin mayer, our biogas solutions are placed at the front and center of the development puzzle, the rest (
Solar, wind, LED lights, water recycling)
For everyone in the audience, get rid of the problem of intermittent garbage and price, and constantly convert free and problematic garbage into baseline energy and fertilizer, the cost is first paid by the need to dispose of waste.
This is a watershed moment for our trip, because it is clear that the first step towards sustainable development is only to turn all waste into value --added products.
The rest becomes easy. (
Imagine a world where it's so clean and efficient that you start looking for other sources of energy and fertilizer as your trash is running out! )
On the evening of April 18, I had a live video lesson online with my environmental science students at the charity Academy from Baghdad, and when I was told that within an hour, I had to leave Baghdad for Kurdistan, where I was going to hold another three days of workshops where Iraq closed all its airspace before the last helicopter left the Green Zone.
I have 20 minutes to pack my luggage to get to the airport.
The reason is: in order to prevent more suicide bombings and attacks before Saturday's election, the government feels that there is no choice but to implement sudden surprises.
Travel curfew so that insurgents can set up trapping devices and explosive devices the day before the election.
So I had to put everything down and go back to my room (
As I was instructed to do in the security briefing, pay careful attention to each missile attack shelter labeled)
, Throw everything together, get to the helipad, fly to a particularly safe place at the airport by military transport helicopter, and then let me take the plane of the embassy to Kurdistan
Security checks in these actions are interesting.
When we passed the metal detector, I found myself announcing with the security staff that my various equipment had abandoned the loaded weapons for inspection.
It's safer in Kurdistan, but I still have to take armored vehicles (
But no team)
In a safe cement and steel T-
Like the compound in Baghdad, the Wall guard compound feels like the compound in the movie Truman Show.
We did go to a private residence and also to government buildings and schools, so we had more freedom than Baghdad, where it was just Ministries and universities we visited.
As I arrived a day in advance, I decided to take advantage of the extra time to see if it was possible to schedule a hands-onon biogas-
Building Workshop.
Unfortunately, it is annoying to do anything spontaneously in such a safe environment.
Get materials for our local creatures
Except for two soldiers, Bryant Ellis (a. k. a. âx80x9canimalâx80x9d)
David Marshall likes to teach people the idea of how to turn kitchen waste into clean and reliable energy, and introduces me to Mui Ayid Shakir, an Iraqi contractor on site, he was a friend of theirs who built a security wall.
He is free to leave the compound and buy materials in the local market (
Usually, we have to go through a long and difficult procurement process, which Frank handled for Baghdad a long time in advance).
This is a very good person, mu naiayyid, who said excitedly: I know the biogas.
A few years ago, when all our gas and electricity were cut off by war, I set up a small demo system that I had been thinking, one day, I want to build a bigger and more useful House!
I said to him, this is your chance!
I will pay if you can get the material.
So after all my presentations to the minister of power and energy, officials, engineers and governors and planners from Erbil to Kirkuk, this is a special opportunity.
The soldier and I worked with a flashlight until midnight and set up the first family --size bio-
Biogas digesters in Kurdistan
To celebrate, I took some ashes from my grandfather, Iraqi lawyer Noel Latham, who died as a refugee in a nursing home in New York during the war, not only on the land he called home, and spread in biology.
The biogas digesters we built
My hope is that his spirit can be integrated with microorganisms that turn waste into fuel and fertilizer to help transform his "beloved Iraq" into a symbol of sustainable development, like a green phoenix rising from the ashes. T. H.
Cooran is co-
The founder of the Solar City, is a new explorer of National Geographic (Class of 2009. )
He is a visiting researcher at the New York School of Philanthropy.