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Five innovations based on biodiversity

May 20, 2015 por ceciliare Leave a Comment


Each year, the UN chooses a theme for the International Day for Biological Diversity. Every theme is geared to increase the understanding and awareness of the biodiversity issues it relates to. Climate change was the focus of 2007, just before the first Kyoto protocol commitment period. Biodiversity and climate change are fundamentally linked. Worldwide, about 72000 plant species are used for medical purposes, of which 21% are endangered. While in the Caribbean, corals provide an estimated US$5-11 billion in services each year.

In this context, celebrating a day seems like a small thing— but in the fight against unsustainable models, every effort in raising awareness of the issues counts. The reason for this particular post runs along these lines, as 2015’s theme is Biodiversity for Sustainable Development.

Following the spirit of sustainable development and biodiversity below are five truly innovative sustainable projects that couldn’t exist without access to our rich and diverse natural capital:

Self-healing concrete

We might not pay much attention to bacteria, but a 2004 study informs that the patterns of bacterial diversity may be qualitatively similar to those observed for plants and animals. It is thanks to this diversity, and one limestone-producing bacteria in particular, that researcher Henk Jonkers from TU Delft has been able to develop a type of self-healing concrete with a 200-year warranty, and be nominated for a European Inventor Award.

Energy-generating building

In Hamburg, the international engineers from Arup, piloted a bio-adaptive building facade, thanks to living micro-algae embedded in the building’s material. The built-in algae absorbs solar energy used to heat the building’s hot-water tank while providing shading, privacy, thermal insulation, and noise reduction. As if all that wasn’t enough, the mature algae can also be harvested and fermented, producing energy.

Renewable packaging

No one’s managed to make a 100% renewable carton yet, but we are getting closer. One example is the new Tetra Pak developed in partnership with Braskem, which will be made of 78% renewable content, thanks to sugar cane. What if the answer for the missing 22% is in other plants?

Air-cleaning walls

In Italy, designers have come up with vertical garden panels that regulate moisture levels and clean the air of interiors, thanks to lichen embedded in a resin base. The fact that benettiMOSS is beautiful also doesn’t hurt.

Pain-free needles

Speaking of hurt, researchers and engineers at Kansai University in Japan have created a pain-free needle after careful study of the mosquito’s mouth. While biology isn’t an integral part of these new needles, this and other biomimetic designs would be impossible to achieve if scientists and researches didn’t have diverse biological examples to mimic.

These are just some innovations that use biodiversity for sustainable development. There is still much more to be said and done on this topic – which is why the IDB will soon be launching a blog dedicated to the subject.

 

 


Filed Under: Ecosystems and Biodiversity

ceciliare

Cecília trabaja como consultora en diseño y comunicación en la División de Cambio Climático del BID en Washington DC. Trabaja en la estrategia de comunicación del área, implementa actividades en redes sociales y produce gráficos, infográficos y los materiales de la división. Antes de ingresar al BID en 2009, trabajó en agencias de publicidad y comunicación en Brasil con clientes como Nike y DHL Express. Cecília es licenciada en diseño gráfico por la Corcoran College of Art and Design (EEUU). Sigue a Cecilia en Twitter: "https://twitter.com/cicasays>@cicasays y en Instagram "http://www.enjoygram.com/cicasees>@cicasees

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pedro Alvarado says

    May 21, 2015 at 5:58 pm

    Mnay of these initiatives are feasible BUT neither global Corporations,nor gov’ts or consumers welcomethem or demand their implementations!!! biodegradable bottles,bags,packaging!!!If only one global corporation(Procter&Gamble)would adopt green packaging it would make biodegrable industries(apllied scientific knowledge) profitable$$biodegradable baby diapers!!! It’s puzzling that some countries are already using “trash” to build habitable spaces,produce energy,potablizing(reclying sewage waters etc.) but poor countries either do not have de resources or do not have the institutional “muscles” to enforce green policies?? can we send “trash”(residual)into outerspace???how much?? economically feasible???

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