Subject:  TGIF...........
Date:     Fri, 24 Apr 1998 110612 -0500 (CDT)
From:     "Roy L. Beavers" <rbeavers@llion.org>
To:       emfguru@hotmail.com
--------------------------------------------------

Hi everybody:

Something 'hopeful'.....  Maybe too hopeful!  I keep thinking about how
the "vested interests" in the present system will work to prevent
their technologies being displaced by the new technologies forcasted
below.....  (We are still using lead-acid batteries in our automobiles,
for example, though the nuclear weapons industry perfected a much
longer lasting alternative forty years ago.  These light-weight, long
lasting batteries are in use in space exploration, but not in our autos
... yet!!!)

Is it possible that the "technical people" who produce such projections
need to know/think more about a political system that resists change and
protects vested interests?  Battelle, by the way, the prognosticators
of the following predictions, is also active in EMF research....  One of
their scientists, Dr. Richard G. Stevens, was the first to suggest the
melatonin hypothesis, in 1985.....

Cheerio......

Roy Beavers (EMFguru)
rbeavers@llion.org..............http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html
................................It is better to light a single candle ...
than to curse the darkness...............................................

*************************************************************************

Environment Wins in Technology Forecast

RICHLAND, Wash., April 21 /PRNewswire/ -- By the year 2008, drinking water
will be safer, lighter weight cars will get 80 miles to a gallon and food
crops will be engineered genetically to require less pesticide and fertilizer.
In its first environmental technology forecast, a team of researchers at the
Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has identified
the 10 most important technological breakthroughs that will lead to a cleaner
environment while providing major benefits to consumers over the next decade.
Technologies that help prevent problems before they arise surfaced as a major
theme.

"Our team members represent decades of experience on national and
international environmental issues including global climate change,
environmental technology development and remediation of major waste sites
worldwide," says Gerry Stokes, associate laboratory director at Pacific
Northwest.  "Dreams and demos now, these technologies will have real impacts
by 2008."

This is the first of an ongoing dialogue to forecast the direction
environmental science and technology is heading in the 21st century, according
to Stokes.  "Our hope is to provide this look ahead on an annual basis to help
enhance public understanding and government decision making," he says.

Pacific Northwest researchers ranked the top 10 environmental technological
breakthroughs for 2008 as:

  Agrogenetics -- Genetic engineering and plant manipulation will reduce
agricultural impacts on the environment.  Growing crops will require less
pesticide due to greater resistance to pests.  Other crops will be engineered
to use their nutrients efficiently, requiring less fertilizer or water while
providing higher yields.  And, crops with several new features -- such as
soybeans that taste better, use less fertilizer and resist pests -- will be
available.

  Smart water treatment -- Smart membranes, or filters, will improve water
treatment at sewage plants and municipal water supplies by adjusting simply or
even automatically to unclog themselves.  Membranes and other techniques will
remove organic compounds, which currently can result in undesired reactions
with chlorine.  Sponge-like grains of sand will attract and hold nitrates and
heavy metals to further protect drinking water in large and small systems.

  Renewable energy storage -- In 10 years, improved power storage will
increase the use of electricity from solar and wind power.  For example,
solar power collected during the day could be stored in rapidly spinning
flywheels and used at night.  The result will be power on demand instead
of when the sun shines or wind blows.  These renewable energy sources also
will help slow increases in greenhouse gases by replacing carbon-based
fuels.

  Micro is beautiful -- The silicon chip ushered in micromanufacturing.
Now micro technology for producing and using everything from chemicals to
energy will provide economic and environmental advantages.  For example,
room air will be heated and cooled more efficiently in tiny channels of
micro heat pumps, saving energy.  And, micro chemical plants will produce
industrial chemicals as needed, thereby eliminating storage and
transportation safety issues.

  Paperless society -- Innovative displays, wireless communications and
customized web magazines will help reduce the mounds of paper in our lives as
well as the environmental impacts from paper and ink manufacturing and use.
Advanced display systems may imitate paper in their flexibility and
portability.  One approach will project images directly on the retina of the
eye.  This capability, coupled with a cellular phone, could provide everyone
from couch potatoes to business travelers with faxes and customized news
anywhere.  For paper products that continue to be used, biodegradable inks
will be more common.

  Molecular design -- An understanding of how materials behave at the
molecular level will help in the development of advanced materials and 
more efficient solar cells.  Molecular design of catalysts could make
chemical reactions and processing so precise that little or no wastes are
produced. And sensors designed at the molecular level will monitor
manufacturing of materials and chemicals more precisely, halting or
correcting processes sensitive to temperature changes and other
parameters.  The result will be higher quality products with fewer
environmental impacts.

  Bioprocessing grows more products -- Microorganisms and plants will
"grow" environmentally friendly chemical and biological products such as
drugs, proteins and enzymes for many uses.  Producing chemical feedstocks,
fuels and pharmaceuticals in this manner will be cost effective and better
for the environment.  Microorganisms retrieved from extremely hot, cold or
forbidding environments are renewing excitement in the bioprocessing
industry for the production of "extremozymes."  These enzymes expand the
range of temperatures and conditions used in manufacturing biotech
products, creating opportunity for new, environmentally friendly
bioprocesses while saving time and energy.

  Real-time environmental sensors -- These innovative sensors will be a
major boon to public health.  Supermarkets will use sensors to detect E.
coli and other dangerous pathogens in food.  Workplace air quality will be
monitored to prevent "sick building syndrome."  Other benefits include
monitoring the environment on airplanes, at hospitals to prevent
infections and in municipal water supplies.  The same technology will help
guard against pathogens used in biological terrorism.

  Enviromanufacturing and recycling -- In 10 years, "green" companies will
create products that are environmentally friendly from cradle to grave.
Plastics, paper, beverage containers and inks, as well as cars and computers,
will be more biodegradable or recyclable.  Also, newer processes, such as dry
cleaning with liquid carbon dioxide, will minimize or eliminate waste.
Hazardous chemicals no longer will be used to clean clothes and the carbon
dioxide will be captured and recycled so as not to add to atmospheric carbon.

  Lightweight Cars -- Squeezing every ounce possible out of cars will mean
a family sedan that gets at least 80 miles per gallon of gas, generates
less pollution and uses less gas.  Lighter cars will be built with less
steel and more lightweight aluminum, magnesium, titanium and composites.
Advanced metal-forming techniques will provide precisely the strength
needed at every point, eliminating all excess weight from today's designs.
Creating a composite sandwich of glass and plastic will cut the 68
kilograms (150 pounds) of glass in today's cars a third or more.
Composite glass also will begin playing a structural role so that metal
can be reduced.  Today's 45.4-kilogram (100-pound) air conditioners will
weigh half as much once glass is specially coated to reflect or absorb
heat radiation.

Pacific Northwest is one of DOE's nine multiprogram national laboratories that
conducts basic and applied research to solve problems in environmental,
energy, health and national security arenas.  The Laboratory has been operated
for DOE by Battelle since 1965.

Recent environmental work at Pacific Northwest includes developing a process
that uses microbes to break down sulfur in waste tire rubber, making tires
recyclable; working with other national laboratories and automakers to develop
a cleaner, more efficient automobile; designing a 190-liter-per-second (3,000
gallon-per-minute) jet mixing pump to stabilize hazardous waste tanks
containing ferrocyanide and other dangerous elements at DOE's Hanford site;
and participating in a multilab effort to predict global and regional climate
change.

For more information on Pacific Northwest's environmental research go to
http://www.pnl.gov/news/back/envirbg.htm.

SOURCE  Battelle, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory





Archive provided courtesy of WaveGuide, http://www.wave-guide.org
Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html