Royal Roads University has developed a sustainability plan with the goals of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 50% by 2020 and becoming carbon neutral and off-grid by specific dates. The plan focuses on 5 key initiatives - greenhouse gas management, becoming grid positive, transportation demand management, ecological siting and conservation, and university stewardship. It outlines projects and partnerships with local organizations to retrofit buildings with renewable energy, increase sustainability education, and reduce the university's environmental impact. The plan earned a silver rating for advancing sustainability in higher education.
A full length PPT that is excellent for potential volunteers to view. Gives country and program overview, pictures of volunteer facilities and costs of volunteering.
- The poem describes a childhood experience where the poet's mother was stung by a scorpion that had taken shelter beneath a sack of rice due to heavy rain.
- The villagers came to the house to sympathize and believed that the mother's suffering from the scorpion's sting would burn away her sins from the past and lessen future misfortunes, showing their superstitious beliefs.
- The poem depicts the superstitious environment and beliefs of rural India at the time, portraying it as a place of superstitions where insects are seen as monsters. It can be seen as satirizing some of the issues in Indian society through this portrayal.
The poem describes an incident when the poet's mother is stung by a scorpion. It explores the different responses of the peasants, the poet's father, and holy man. The peasants try religious rituals to heal the mother, while the father takes a rational, scientific approach. After 20 hours of suffering, the poison loses its sting. The mother expresses gratitude that the scorpion stung her and not her children.
Rexel foundation for a better energy future brochureEnergy 3.0
We are living in a time of great change. The energy world is at the center of an economic and social transition driven by unmatched innovations in technology. Energy efficiency and related services, which are helping to save energy and improve comfort, play a leading role.
This document describes the EQuilibrium Communities Initiative, a collaborative initiative between Natural Resources Canada’s CanmetENERGY and Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation to fund and support sustainable community development projects. The initiative provides $4.2 million and technical support to selected projects to improve environmental performance in areas like energy use, transportation, water management, and more. Four initial projects were selected - in Edmonton, Ottawa, Toronto, and near Tofino - which are now in planning or construction phases and aim to showcase innovative sustainable features and systems.
Royal Roads University has developed a sustainability plan with the goals of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 50% by 2020 and becoming carbon neutral and off-grid by specific dates. The plan focuses on 5 key initiatives - greenhouse gas management, becoming grid positive, transportation demand management, ecological siting and conservation, and university stewardship. It outlines projects and partnerships with local organizations to retrofit buildings with renewable energy, increase sustainability education, and reduce the university's environmental impact. The plan earned a silver rating for advancing sustainability in higher education.
A full length PPT that is excellent for potential volunteers to view. Gives country and program overview, pictures of volunteer facilities and costs of volunteering.
- The poem describes a childhood experience where the poet's mother was stung by a scorpion that had taken shelter beneath a sack of rice due to heavy rain.
- The villagers came to the house to sympathize and believed that the mother's suffering from the scorpion's sting would burn away her sins from the past and lessen future misfortunes, showing their superstitious beliefs.
- The poem depicts the superstitious environment and beliefs of rural India at the time, portraying it as a place of superstitions where insects are seen as monsters. It can be seen as satirizing some of the issues in Indian society through this portrayal.
The poem describes an incident when the poet's mother is stung by a scorpion. It explores the different responses of the peasants, the poet's father, and holy man. The peasants try religious rituals to heal the mother, while the father takes a rational, scientific approach. After 20 hours of suffering, the poison loses its sting. The mother expresses gratitude that the scorpion stung her and not her children.
Rexel foundation for a better energy future brochureEnergy 3.0
We are living in a time of great change. The energy world is at the center of an economic and social transition driven by unmatched innovations in technology. Energy efficiency and related services, which are helping to save energy and improve comfort, play a leading role.
This document describes the EQuilibrium Communities Initiative, a collaborative initiative between Natural Resources Canada’s CanmetENERGY and Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation to fund and support sustainable community development projects. The initiative provides $4.2 million and technical support to selected projects to improve environmental performance in areas like energy use, transportation, water management, and more. Four initial projects were selected - in Edmonton, Ottawa, Toronto, and near Tofino - which are now in planning or construction phases and aim to showcase innovative sustainable features and systems.
This document discusses opportunities for schools to offset carbon emissions from equipment like photocopiers through the Toshiba African Energy Efficient Stove Project. It notes that schools are responsible for a significant portion of public sector emissions and sustainable procurement is important. The stove project provides educational benefits by allowing students to learn about other cultures and compare energy use and impacts. It also aligns with the national curriculum in numerous subject areas from citizenship to geography to science. Resources for teaching about the project are provided.
This document discusses strategies for accelerating the transition to a low-carbon economy. It makes the following key points:
1) The global energy transition has reached a tipping point, as indicated by coal plants being phased out, economic growth decoupling from CO2 emissions, and renewable energy becoming cheaper than fossil fuels in many places.
2) A transition involves fundamental changes to structures, culture, and practices, and represents a power shift from the incumbent regime to emerging alternatives. Governance is needed to create spaces for innovation to emerge and empower new niches.
3) Examples of transition governance include the Netherlands' approach of establishing long-term visions and networks of transition experiments across different domains like energy,
This document discusses using municipal solid waste in combined gasification systems with coal to generate syngas as a sustainable alternative fuel. It proposes a theoretical model for co-gasifying up to 200 tons per day of municipal waste with local coal in small to medium Colombian municipalities. The model could help address waste management needs while sustaining coal resource use.
[Climate Chnage Program Action Plan Paper : Group A]shrdcinfo
The document summarizes the discussions of Group A, which is focused on waste management and recycling issues in relation to climate change. The group is made up of members from various countries and is facilitated by Dr. Woon-su Kim. They identified several challenges with waste management in their countries, including low public participation, increasing waste volumes, and lack of advanced technology/facilities. The group set goals to address these issues and proposed strategies to achieve the goals by certain target years, such as incentivizing public participation, imposing regulations to reduce waste, and exploring public-private partnerships to develop new facilities.
Article 4 of the Energy Efficiency Directive requires Member States to define long-term strategies for stimulating energy efficiency of the buildings sector. The Department of Energy, Communications and Natural Resources is therefore tasked with publishing a National Renovation Strategy V.2 by 30th April 2017, covering buildings in the commercial, residential and public building sectors.
The aim of this first workshop was to explore all measures that could be taken in Ireland to move towards large-scale deep-renovation in the Public Buildings Sector.
The workshop took place in Farmleigh House on Thursday 16th June 2016.
Ecochilectra is a program launched in Chile in 2010 that replicates the successful Ecoelce program in Brazil. Ecochilectra aims to promote waste recycling among electricity customers by offering discounts on bills equivalent to the value of waste contributed. The program was launched in Santiago, Chile, which has high urbanization and income inequality. Ecochilectra faced challenges adapting to Chile's different context from Brazil, and had to develop its own waste collection system rather than integrating existing recyclers as in Brazil. After initial trials with individual recyclers, Ecochilectra transitioned to a system of mobile collection points where customers deliver waste. The program has now expanded to six municipalities in Santiago and is working
The University of Tennessee Institute for Public Service ( IPS) created the Tennessee Renewable Energy & Economic Development Council (TREEDC) in 2008 to help connect renewable energy initiatives with economic development opportunities for communities . TREEDC started with 4 rural cities scattered across the state. TREEDC has grown into an international organization with 96 mayors and 30 Universities that collaborate together to create a path to fast track renewable energy worldwide. The TREEDC International Exchange Program expands the scope of TREEDC’s mission of connecting renewable energy with economic development.
The International Exchange Program was created in 2012 to help cultivate technology and informational exchange among TREEDC’s members with international counterparts. The major objectives are information and technology exchange between sister cities and colleges, showcase Tennessee technology providers , promote social responsibility, and to replicate the TREEDC model worldwide. Five (5) countries were selected and the Philippines was chosen as the Pilot Country for Tennessee to connect to the rest of the world in advancing renewable energy. Today, there are 8 Philippine cities and 12 universities that have enrolled into the Program. This initiative has produced 5 educational forums across the country, provided typhoon relief assistance and has facilitated solar development, waste to energy and pico-hydro development in the rural areas of the country. The University has generated more positive recognition worldwide as an innovator in outreach and Tennessee renewable energy businesses have secured new customers in the Philippines. This has become a win-win for all parties involved.
The document provides an update on the CoLaBATS project, which aims to develop a novel process for recycling lithium-ion batteries. It notes that the project has completed the selection of task-specific ionic liquids and green chemistry approaches, allowing work to begin on developing and building a pilot plant. Over the next six months, the consortium will host workshops, scale up the prototype, and begin production of the pilot plant with the goal of demonstrating the novel recycling process. The document also discusses sustainability and developing a circular economy for batteries through reuse, remanufacturing, and improving recycling.
The document outlines various green energy initiatives that have been implemented in schools and businesses in southern Alberta, including installing solar panels, wind turbines, and implementing energy efficiency measures. Examples provided include a high school that implemented various renewable energy projects over multiple phases and a school where ENMAX installed different alternative energy technologies for students to learn from. The document concludes by having attendees break into groups to propose and plan a renewable energy project for a community, school, or business.
The Orange, MA Sustainable Design Assessment Team program provides broad assessments to help frame future policies and sustainability solutions for the town. The assessment examines issues related to environmental stewardship, social equity, and economic development. Key areas of focus include land use, urban revitalization, transportation, and developing a sustainable economic vision. The assessment team will deliver a report with recommendations to the community within 2-3 months and follow up over the next year to assess progress.
Aprovechamiento termico de los desechos Porpuestas desde wtert colombiaEnrique Posada
The WTERT Colombia Council was created to stimulate research and identify technologies for energy use and waste management in Colombia. It seeks to promote waste management and participation from universities, industry, government and other organizations. The Council meets regularly to discuss topics like waste-to-energy and establish relationships with other institutions. It also aims to offer training courses on waste-to-energy and held its second Pan-American conference on the subject in Medellin, highlighting the need for sustainable waste management in Colombia.
PROPOSAL OF CO-LEARNING VISITOR CENTERYen Min Khor
This document contains a student's project proposal for a Co-Learning Visitor Center. It includes sections on design suitability, project viability, procurement, resource planning, maintenance strategy, risk analysis, and work breakdown structure. The student's name, ID number, tutor, and date are provided at the top. Breakdowns of marks received on the proposal are listed. The proposal contains information on the objectives, client, stakeholders, site analysis, floor plans, cost estimates, and strategies for project implementation and management.
Learn how ten million people in Mexico City came together to fight environmental damage, improve traffic congestion, improve air quality, open streets to bikes and pedestrians, and improve public health and civic pride.
1) The document discusses the need for open innovation and collaboration to accelerate the transition to a low-carbon future through disruptive clean technologies.
2) It argues that distributed models of innovation involving global networks are needed to develop technologies like smart grids and engage the public.
3) Universities can play a key role by facilitating collaborations between partners from industry, government, and other sectors.
The City of Boulder has been working for decades to become zero waste and move beyond recycling and composting to a circular economic model that eliminates waste. Currently, 57% of materials are diverted from the landfill through recycling and composting programs. Boulder plans to further these efforts through actions like an urban metabolism study, focusing on reducing food waste, sustainable procurement policies, and an innovation hub for circular solutions.
SAFE Webinar I: Overview of Terminology, Cross-cutting Issues, Challenges and...FAO
More than a third of the world's population relies on traditional fuels — wood, coal, animal dung, and agricultural waste — for their energy needs, including cooking their meals, heating their homes, and lighting their communities. The challenges they face in accessing clean energy are numerous, often dangerous and unsustainable, particularly during complex emergencies and protracted crises.
Safe and sustainable access to energy is being increasingly recognized as a human right — essential for the safety, well-being, and productivity of the people the humanitarian community serves. It is also essential for social and economic development, offering opportunities for improved lives and economic progress.
The series of webinars will present how Safe Access to Fuel and Energy (SAFE) and similar initiatives address this multi-sectoral issue by working to ensure access to fuel and energy for cooking, heating, lighting, and powering for crisis-affected populations. The events will also highlight the synergies and multi-stakeholder approach of these initiatives by inviting key partners to present their role and experience in addressing energy access in emergencies and protracted crises.
The first SAFE webinar will present key concepts and terms related to energy in emergencies and protracted crises, the multi-sectoral risks and challenges associated with the collection and use of traditional biomass fuels and how organizations are coordinating and working together to build resilience by responding to the energy needs of affected populations.
The webinar covers:
• The linkages between energy and food security, nutrition, environment, gender, women’s protection, health and livelihoods as well as other aspects;
• The research and pilot projects implemented through the Moving Energy Initiative led by Chatham House and DFID to help ensure safe and sustainable energy access for displaced populations;
• The inter-agency Safe Access to Fuel and Energy (SAFE) Humanitarian Working Group and the Set4Food project which bring various stakeholders together in order to raise awareness, establish knowledge-sharing platforms, address energy-related challenges and identify solutions in emergencies and protracted crises.
The document proposes improving Thailand's recycling rates through better bin designs suited to local behaviors and enhanced collection systems. It aims to implement an economically sustainable and locally structured recycling collection system via the informal sector. The first year budget of $150,000 would fund feasibility studies, project design, and beta testing to design bins suited to Thailand's urban environment and more efficient collection systems. This would involve partnering with design universities and implementing research, workshops, and testing with the goal of increasing recycling rates from 20% to 50% within 10 years through a nationwide program.
Natural capitalism involves four shifts in business practices: (1) radically increasing resource productivity, (2) shifting to biologically-inspired closed-loop production models that eliminate waste, (3) moving from selling goods to selling solutions through leasing models, and (4) reinvesting in natural capital to ensure future resource availability and gain a reputation for environmental stewardship. Examples provided illustrate how companies have implemented these shifts to reduce costs, create new revenue streams, and build their brand through greater sustainability.
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Similar to LongWay Home BuildBoston Architectural Presentation
This document discusses opportunities for schools to offset carbon emissions from equipment like photocopiers through the Toshiba African Energy Efficient Stove Project. It notes that schools are responsible for a significant portion of public sector emissions and sustainable procurement is important. The stove project provides educational benefits by allowing students to learn about other cultures and compare energy use and impacts. It also aligns with the national curriculum in numerous subject areas from citizenship to geography to science. Resources for teaching about the project are provided.
This document discusses strategies for accelerating the transition to a low-carbon economy. It makes the following key points:
1) The global energy transition has reached a tipping point, as indicated by coal plants being phased out, economic growth decoupling from CO2 emissions, and renewable energy becoming cheaper than fossil fuels in many places.
2) A transition involves fundamental changes to structures, culture, and practices, and represents a power shift from the incumbent regime to emerging alternatives. Governance is needed to create spaces for innovation to emerge and empower new niches.
3) Examples of transition governance include the Netherlands' approach of establishing long-term visions and networks of transition experiments across different domains like energy,
This document discusses using municipal solid waste in combined gasification systems with coal to generate syngas as a sustainable alternative fuel. It proposes a theoretical model for co-gasifying up to 200 tons per day of municipal waste with local coal in small to medium Colombian municipalities. The model could help address waste management needs while sustaining coal resource use.
[Climate Chnage Program Action Plan Paper : Group A]shrdcinfo
The document summarizes the discussions of Group A, which is focused on waste management and recycling issues in relation to climate change. The group is made up of members from various countries and is facilitated by Dr. Woon-su Kim. They identified several challenges with waste management in their countries, including low public participation, increasing waste volumes, and lack of advanced technology/facilities. The group set goals to address these issues and proposed strategies to achieve the goals by certain target years, such as incentivizing public participation, imposing regulations to reduce waste, and exploring public-private partnerships to develop new facilities.
Article 4 of the Energy Efficiency Directive requires Member States to define long-term strategies for stimulating energy efficiency of the buildings sector. The Department of Energy, Communications and Natural Resources is therefore tasked with publishing a National Renovation Strategy V.2 by 30th April 2017, covering buildings in the commercial, residential and public building sectors.
The aim of this first workshop was to explore all measures that could be taken in Ireland to move towards large-scale deep-renovation in the Public Buildings Sector.
The workshop took place in Farmleigh House on Thursday 16th June 2016.
Ecochilectra is a program launched in Chile in 2010 that replicates the successful Ecoelce program in Brazil. Ecochilectra aims to promote waste recycling among electricity customers by offering discounts on bills equivalent to the value of waste contributed. The program was launched in Santiago, Chile, which has high urbanization and income inequality. Ecochilectra faced challenges adapting to Chile's different context from Brazil, and had to develop its own waste collection system rather than integrating existing recyclers as in Brazil. After initial trials with individual recyclers, Ecochilectra transitioned to a system of mobile collection points where customers deliver waste. The program has now expanded to six municipalities in Santiago and is working
The University of Tennessee Institute for Public Service ( IPS) created the Tennessee Renewable Energy & Economic Development Council (TREEDC) in 2008 to help connect renewable energy initiatives with economic development opportunities for communities . TREEDC started with 4 rural cities scattered across the state. TREEDC has grown into an international organization with 96 mayors and 30 Universities that collaborate together to create a path to fast track renewable energy worldwide. The TREEDC International Exchange Program expands the scope of TREEDC’s mission of connecting renewable energy with economic development.
The International Exchange Program was created in 2012 to help cultivate technology and informational exchange among TREEDC’s members with international counterparts. The major objectives are information and technology exchange between sister cities and colleges, showcase Tennessee technology providers , promote social responsibility, and to replicate the TREEDC model worldwide. Five (5) countries were selected and the Philippines was chosen as the Pilot Country for Tennessee to connect to the rest of the world in advancing renewable energy. Today, there are 8 Philippine cities and 12 universities that have enrolled into the Program. This initiative has produced 5 educational forums across the country, provided typhoon relief assistance and has facilitated solar development, waste to energy and pico-hydro development in the rural areas of the country. The University has generated more positive recognition worldwide as an innovator in outreach and Tennessee renewable energy businesses have secured new customers in the Philippines. This has become a win-win for all parties involved.
The document provides an update on the CoLaBATS project, which aims to develop a novel process for recycling lithium-ion batteries. It notes that the project has completed the selection of task-specific ionic liquids and green chemistry approaches, allowing work to begin on developing and building a pilot plant. Over the next six months, the consortium will host workshops, scale up the prototype, and begin production of the pilot plant with the goal of demonstrating the novel recycling process. The document also discusses sustainability and developing a circular economy for batteries through reuse, remanufacturing, and improving recycling.
The document outlines various green energy initiatives that have been implemented in schools and businesses in southern Alberta, including installing solar panels, wind turbines, and implementing energy efficiency measures. Examples provided include a high school that implemented various renewable energy projects over multiple phases and a school where ENMAX installed different alternative energy technologies for students to learn from. The document concludes by having attendees break into groups to propose and plan a renewable energy project for a community, school, or business.
The Orange, MA Sustainable Design Assessment Team program provides broad assessments to help frame future policies and sustainability solutions for the town. The assessment examines issues related to environmental stewardship, social equity, and economic development. Key areas of focus include land use, urban revitalization, transportation, and developing a sustainable economic vision. The assessment team will deliver a report with recommendations to the community within 2-3 months and follow up over the next year to assess progress.
Aprovechamiento termico de los desechos Porpuestas desde wtert colombiaEnrique Posada
The WTERT Colombia Council was created to stimulate research and identify technologies for energy use and waste management in Colombia. It seeks to promote waste management and participation from universities, industry, government and other organizations. The Council meets regularly to discuss topics like waste-to-energy and establish relationships with other institutions. It also aims to offer training courses on waste-to-energy and held its second Pan-American conference on the subject in Medellin, highlighting the need for sustainable waste management in Colombia.
PROPOSAL OF CO-LEARNING VISITOR CENTERYen Min Khor
This document contains a student's project proposal for a Co-Learning Visitor Center. It includes sections on design suitability, project viability, procurement, resource planning, maintenance strategy, risk analysis, and work breakdown structure. The student's name, ID number, tutor, and date are provided at the top. Breakdowns of marks received on the proposal are listed. The proposal contains information on the objectives, client, stakeholders, site analysis, floor plans, cost estimates, and strategies for project implementation and management.
Learn how ten million people in Mexico City came together to fight environmental damage, improve traffic congestion, improve air quality, open streets to bikes and pedestrians, and improve public health and civic pride.
1) The document discusses the need for open innovation and collaboration to accelerate the transition to a low-carbon future through disruptive clean technologies.
2) It argues that distributed models of innovation involving global networks are needed to develop technologies like smart grids and engage the public.
3) Universities can play a key role by facilitating collaborations between partners from industry, government, and other sectors.
The City of Boulder has been working for decades to become zero waste and move beyond recycling and composting to a circular economic model that eliminates waste. Currently, 57% of materials are diverted from the landfill through recycling and composting programs. Boulder plans to further these efforts through actions like an urban metabolism study, focusing on reducing food waste, sustainable procurement policies, and an innovation hub for circular solutions.
SAFE Webinar I: Overview of Terminology, Cross-cutting Issues, Challenges and...FAO
More than a third of the world's population relies on traditional fuels — wood, coal, animal dung, and agricultural waste — for their energy needs, including cooking their meals, heating their homes, and lighting their communities. The challenges they face in accessing clean energy are numerous, often dangerous and unsustainable, particularly during complex emergencies and protracted crises.
Safe and sustainable access to energy is being increasingly recognized as a human right — essential for the safety, well-being, and productivity of the people the humanitarian community serves. It is also essential for social and economic development, offering opportunities for improved lives and economic progress.
The series of webinars will present how Safe Access to Fuel and Energy (SAFE) and similar initiatives address this multi-sectoral issue by working to ensure access to fuel and energy for cooking, heating, lighting, and powering for crisis-affected populations. The events will also highlight the synergies and multi-stakeholder approach of these initiatives by inviting key partners to present their role and experience in addressing energy access in emergencies and protracted crises.
The first SAFE webinar will present key concepts and terms related to energy in emergencies and protracted crises, the multi-sectoral risks and challenges associated with the collection and use of traditional biomass fuels and how organizations are coordinating and working together to build resilience by responding to the energy needs of affected populations.
The webinar covers:
• The linkages between energy and food security, nutrition, environment, gender, women’s protection, health and livelihoods as well as other aspects;
• The research and pilot projects implemented through the Moving Energy Initiative led by Chatham House and DFID to help ensure safe and sustainable energy access for displaced populations;
• The inter-agency Safe Access to Fuel and Energy (SAFE) Humanitarian Working Group and the Set4Food project which bring various stakeholders together in order to raise awareness, establish knowledge-sharing platforms, address energy-related challenges and identify solutions in emergencies and protracted crises.
The document proposes improving Thailand's recycling rates through better bin designs suited to local behaviors and enhanced collection systems. It aims to implement an economically sustainable and locally structured recycling collection system via the informal sector. The first year budget of $150,000 would fund feasibility studies, project design, and beta testing to design bins suited to Thailand's urban environment and more efficient collection systems. This would involve partnering with design universities and implementing research, workshops, and testing with the goal of increasing recycling rates from 20% to 50% within 10 years through a nationwide program.
Natural capitalism involves four shifts in business practices: (1) radically increasing resource productivity, (2) shifting to biologically-inspired closed-loop production models that eliminate waste, (3) moving from selling goods to selling solutions through leasing models, and (4) reinvesting in natural capital to ensure future resource availability and gain a reputation for environmental stewardship. Examples provided illustrate how companies have implemented these shifts to reduce costs, create new revenue streams, and build their brand through greater sustainability.
Similar to LongWay Home BuildBoston Architectural Presentation (20)
8. Why Comalapa? 71%unemployment rate Few educational and work opportunities after 6th grade Guatemala has a population of 14.02 millionand over 400,000 youth are in gangs, which is about 2.8%
12. low-cost structureCurriculum will teach new industries that will keep a cycle of environmental hygiene ongoing and provide jobs for Comalapa today and tomorrow
17. vocational workshops construction: ongoing projected completion : spring 2010 carpentry/masonry/electrical/welding alternative construction
18.
19.
20. primary school classrooms construction: begin winter 2010 projected completion : spring 2011 K-6th , standard government curriculum with additional mayan focus small business entrepurnurship
56. “There are more tires than trees on earth. Why not build with something we don’t need to survive?” - Mike Reynolds, The Newshour Show with Jim Lehrer, 2009
57. 6 principles of an “Earthship”: Water / Electricity / Sewage / Comfort / Food
58. Incorporating the CONCEPT of the 6 principles into planning and design. Using second-use materials and heating/cooling with out fuel as much as possible. Incorporating SOME of the METHODS of the Earthship into new design and/or retrofitting existing structures. Incorporating ALL of the METHODS, ie. building an Earthship *one story, small , unattached structures *parks – pavilions, sheds, bleachers *residential homes, garages and sheds, extending into the suburbs 4. Use trash from areas where unable to build earthships to build in locations where earthsips are already being built . A sophisticated recycling + rerouting system would allow cities another way to engage in the effort of using less natural resources in addition to alternative building practices.
59.
Editor's Notes
mission
Guatemala is a developing country with typical social ills including poverty, lack of education, lure of crime to survive
Been working on sustainable development projects for four years ParqueChimiyaBeen working on sustainable development projects for four years Current project is a green school complex aimed at combating the pervasive cycle of poverty
David storyTeam – how does this actually happen?Combination of people (crew pic)