Same energy, more power: accelerating energy efficiency in Asia
by
Sean McClowry in Energy
Energy efficiency is the approach that involves doing more with less through a number of initiatives to reduce energy waste. The commitments that China, India and Southeast Asian countries have made to energy efficiency show us that energy efficiency is good “bang for the buck".
How information technology is helping us become more energy efficient
by
Sean McClowry in Energy
In this report you’ll find a number of practical case studies whereby companies and governments are using information technology to provide a better grid system, smarter buildings and enhanced logistics. It shows how organisations are achieving reduced energy requirements as a result of improvements to energy efficiency and reduced consumption ...
These amazing graphs show what's really happening with the oil crash
by
Brian Houston in Energy
In the United States, petrol has fallen to less than $2 per gallon (53 cents per liter) for the first time in 5 years. Analysts point to many different reasons for the the crash in crude oil prices (and the subsequent drop in petrol) but these beautiful graphs lay out the reason in a clear format that's easy to understand.
Help us build a Cleanleap future
by
Brian Houston in Work
- Are you a science communicator, blogger or writer living in Asia or Africa?
- Do you know about or are you connected to some interesting clean energy, food science or sustainability projects in your area of the world?
- Can you commit to writing at least one article per week?
The new great walls: a guide to China's overseas dam industry
by
Sean McClowry in Energy
In the rollout of new hydropower projects around the world no one is playing a bigger role than China. 5 of the 10 biggest hydroelectric power stations in the world are in China and Chinese companies are working on hundreds of projects in other countries. The role China is playing doesn’t just apply to engineering, Chinese banks are filling the gap of traditional funders such as the World Bank.
Plastic eating worms could help deal with the plastic waste menace
by
David Kariuki
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Scientists have discovered that the caterpillars residing in hives and that eat the wax from which bees make honey combs, could actually eat away polyethylene plastic!





