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Strathclyde University scientists end marabu weed nightmare

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  • Strathclyde University scientists end marabu weed nightmare

    Strathclyde University scientists end marabu weed nightmare
    By Ken Macdonald
    BBC Scotland Science Correspondent

    Marabu has sprung up on land abandoned after the decline of Cuba's sugar industry
    Continue reading the main story
    Related Stories
    UK firm signs Cuban energy deal
    It was the plant that had nothing going for it.

    Once an innocent and attractive import from Africa, marabu likes the fertile soil of Cuba rather too much.

    The woody shrub was brought to the Caribbean because of its attractive flowers, but when the collapse of the Soviet bloc led to the decline of the Cuban sugar industry it left thousands of hectares of land open to weeds.

    Marabu was quick to take advantage. At the last count, it covered 1.7 million hectares of once-productive land.

    Marabu wood is no good for building. It's too smoky for cooking or heating. It doesn't even float.

    It was pretty much useless - until Strathclyde University's engineering faculty got their hands on it.

    Excellent filter
    According to Prof Peter Hall, he and his colleagues started "playing" with it. At the end of the process they found they had produced high-quality activated carbon for a fraction of the cost of similar materials.

    Professor Hall holds up a small plastic vial containing a few grams of marabu carbon. Each tiny shard contains millions of microscopic holes.

    "That," he says, "has a surface area equivalent to the city of Glasgow."


    Scientists at Strathclyde have used marabu to create a filter for rum, whisky and even water
    It's a characteristic that makes it an excellent filter. Cuba currently spends millions of dollars importing activated carbon for use in its rum industry. Marabu carbon could do the job instead. The process could also be applied to gin, vodka, whisky - or to produce clean drinking water in the developing world.

    But that's not the half of it. Ground down and mixed with a polymer base, it can be painted onto aluminium to create lightweight electrodes.

    Working with colleagues at St Andrews University, the Strathclyde engineers are using them to make cells for lithium-oxygen batteries which are fifteen times thinner and lighter than existing ones. They're rechargeable and non-toxic.

    Scientific mission
    Possible uses include electric cars that weigh less and can travel further between charges.

    The Strathclyde engineers are also using marabu carbon to take a step beyond batteries to super capacitors. They carry a bigger charge and pack more power than ordinary capacitors. Their applications range from running mp3 players to powering buses.

    The Scottish-Cuban research project began after a scientific mission funded by Scottish Development International introduced Scottish experts to Cuban government ministers.

    From the collapse of the USSR to slimmer, lighter mobile phones and better tasting cocktails?

    Some of these developments will take years to make it to the marketplace.

    But if they're a commercial success the Cubans may have to start farming the weed nobody wanted.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    Wind and sunlight make Kenyan profits

    Mr Ng'eno co-founded Winafrique Technologies Ltd in 2001
    Continue reading the main story
    African Dream
    New leaders required
    Flower power
    The 'people's banker'
    An entrepreneur's best friend
    Many things may be lacking in Africa but there are two which are abundant and free all over the continent - wind and sunlight - and Kenya's Anthony Kiptoo Ng'eno decided to turn them into a profit.

    In 2001 he and his partner Michael G Chavanga formed a company, Winafrique Technologies Ltd, with the goal of taking advantage of the opportunities offered by the renewable energy market in East and Central Africa.

    "When we started off the company, we were given a very difficult challenge of powering a very remote site, and we quickly realised that conventional power could not reach where this project was going to happen and diesel engines were also going to be very expensive, so we started looking at renewable energy," Mr Ng'eno told the BBC's series African Dream.

    "We quickly got training from China, Hong Kong and the US on how to design, supply and maintain, and we met quite a few people - consultants, engineers - who also helped us build the company along the way," he said.

    "Once we recognised that there was that niche, it was just pure focus. We knew we could do it, and we just went after it".

    Winafrique's main investment has been in wind-solar hybrid energy but it also works on water pumps and energy storage.

    The company offers its services to private clients and to governments, aid agencies and businesses.

    Green pioneer
    So far the company has installed more than 150 hybrid power systems in different parts of Kenya. Winafrique is also in charge of their maintenance.

    Continue reading the main story
    Anthony Kiptoo Ng'eno
    Age: 38
    Hobbies: Travelling, swimming, reading and listening to music
    Studied Computing and IT at the Open University in the UK
    Worked on the Asian Sky Project in London
    Trained as a windpower installer with US-based firm Bergey
    Co-founded Winafrique Technologies Ltd in 2001
    Winafrique has won several green awards, including the Bloomberg New Energy Finance Pioneer in 2011
    The company has established partnerships with Safaricom, the country's main mobile telephony firm, and with the low-energy computer provider Inveneo, among others.

    It has also worked with the International Committee of the Red Cross to provide wind and solar power to a water desalination plant in Lamu, on the Kenyan coast.

    Winafrique's work and its positive environmental impact have not gone without recognition.

    In 2009 it was the winner of a Green Telecoms Award at the AfricaCom conference in South Africa, in 2010 it was chosen as the Best Green LTE Product or Initiative at the LTE World Summit in the Netherlands, and in 2011 the company was recognised as a Bloomberg New Energy Finance Pioneer.

    "I have a passion for green energy as it is one of the technological leaps that will allow Africa to address its development challenges," Mr Ng'eno said.

    Surprised looks
    The entrepreneur, who previously worked in London and has a degree in Computing and IT from the Open University in the UK, said that getting initial funding for Winafrique was not easy.


    "It was a start-up, a completely new idea, a new concept, so there was a lot of resistance, a lot of surprised looks when we introduced ourselves for what it is and what we are doing," he told the BBC.

    "The business side of it was very difficult because nobody had done it before, specifically the way we were going to look at it. There was no track record for anybody to follow so everything was purely first time.

    "You go into a bank and you have to negotiate from zero, you have to sell them the idea of what it is that you're doing before they can finance the idea. It was a very engaging process and it has taken us up to today".

    But he admitted that he could have helped to kick-start his company by writing a better business plan.

    "I think that's what we needed, a more aggressive business plan, more engagement of finances, probably, I think those are the two main issues."

    Does he have any advice for younger entrepreneurs?

    "Hard work, hard work, hard work, and you also have to focus the hard work - you have to have a strategy," he said.

    "You have to have a product, and be organised, all the way from your internal organisation to your financial organisation to the structure of your company."

    African Dream is broadcast on the BBC Network Africa programme every Monday morning.

    Every week, one successful business man or woman will explain how they started off and what others could learn from them.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      Very nice stories

      Science-Technology-Engineering-Mathematics rules
      TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

      Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

      D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

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