Intro by Jon Davy
As we pointed out in an earlier article, the efforts to suppress humanity have galvanised a renaissance.
As the globalist crime syndicate, through the Vaccine Mass Poisoning drive and the new war orchestrated via its proxies in Ukraine, engineers the latest paroxysms of insanity to blight the human community, we witness something quite remarkable.
History will recall that far from succumbing, the convulsions of this period mark a benign uprising of the human community and the ending of the Dark Age of barbarism that has gripped Earth.
These are the birth convulsions of a new of enlightenment for our planet-wide human community.
Whilst the swamp creature that has held the planet in its suffocating grip goes through death throes wherein its thrashing tail can yet be lethal, behind the veil of darkness erected by its media we witness the birth of new ideas and saner criteria and the rise of freedom-dedicated groups and voices in vast profusion.
Among these we discover tremendous creativity and ingenious solutions to the survival problems that present themselves as the human race grows and expands.
The following article is a timely example when the forces of tyranny are seeking to stifle the flourishing human community through the device of rigged energy costs, that the solution to our problems is not the suffocation of tyranny. It is instead to knock off mucking people about and leave them free to get on with what sane humans do so well: solving survival problems.
The solutions are out there.
Solar panels, made from food waste, produce energy without sunlight
Following intro source: The Organic Consumers Association (VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED)
Solar panels are a cornerstone of the clean energy revolution. And yet, they have one great flaw: when the clouds roll in their productivity dives.
Now, a new type of solar panel has been developed by an electrical engineering student at Mapua University that harvests the unseen ultraviolet light from the sun that makes it through even dense cloud coverage.
Carvey Ehren Maigue, who in 2020 won the James Dyson Sustainability Award for his creation, hopes it will soon be used on the windows and walls of large buildings, turning them into constant sources of energy.
Solar panels that don’t rely on visible sunlight
The concept, called AuREUS (which stands for Aurora Renewable Energy and UV Sequestration), uses luminescent particles from fruit and vegetable waste that absorb UV light and convert it into visible light. A solar film then converts that visible light into energy.
FOLLOWING ARTICLE SOURCE: BrightersideNews
Maigue says the system could be applied to entire buildings such as the Montreal Convention Centre. (CREDIT: James Dyson Foundation)
Solar panels are a cornerstone of the clean energy revolution. And yet, they have one great flaw: when the clouds roll in their productivity dives.
Now, a new type of solar panel has been developed by an electrical engineering student at Mapua University that harvests the unseen ultraviolet light from the sun that makes it through even dense cloud coverage.
Carvey Ehren Maigue, who in 2020 won the James Dyson Sustainability Award for his creation, hopes it will soon be used on the windows and walls of large buildings, turning them into constant sources of energy.
The concept, called AuREUS (which stands for Aurora Renewable Energy and UV Sequestration), uses luminescent particles from fruit and vegetable waste that absorb UV light and convert it into visible light. A solar film then converts that visible light into energy.
A solar film converts visible light into energy. (CREDIT: James Dyson Foundation)
“It’s similar to how we breathe in oxygen and we exhale carbon dioxide,” Maigue said. “It takes in ultraviolet light, and then after some time it would shed it as visible light.”
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The material is made using waste agricultural crops
Maigue’s prototype for AuREUS is a single 3-by-2-foot lime greenn-tinted panel that he installed in the window in his apartment. In his demonstration for the James Dyson Award, he showed that his test panel can generate enough electricity to charge two phones per day. Scaled up, Maigue says these panels would enable buildings to run entirely on their own electricity.
Democratizing renewable energy
The creator also says the flexibility of the material — the resin can even be applied to fabric for clothing — allows designers to use the panels in a variety of different, innovative designs that could help more people to understand and adopt renewable energy solutions.
Carvey Ehren Maigue holding up one of his prototype panels. (CREDIT: James Dyson Foundation)
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