Is A Gasifier The Best Alternate Energy Source?
July 19, 2010 by Guest
Filed under Uncategorized
A gasifyer is a mechanical device for heating wood chips, or many other types of dry organic matter, to a temperature high enough to release the volatile gasses locked within them. The gasses produced can be burned in an engine to make power or merely burned in a heating system. The fundamental structure of the gasifier may be a container perhaps the size of an oil barrel which needs to be well insulated to retain the heat.
The container has within it a layer of burning fuel. This has access to outside air, allowing a small part to burn, but under controlled conditions, and start the gas production.
This makes the whole process self contained.
A modest controlled burn is necessary, partially because you do not want to simply set fire to all the combustion volume, and the small fire burning with limited oxygen is efficient. This warmth is used to dry out and warm the fuel stock, so that when it falls into the fire grate, it will readily burn. Temperatures of the order of 1200 degrees F should be aimed for. These hot volatile gasses ascend naturally and escape at the top of the cylinder. They are then filtered to take out particles, and cooled as a denser gas has more power.
A specific benefit is a gasifyer is it is self contained yet small enough to be moveable by pallet or trailer. A four cylinder engine needs an oil drum sized gas producer, but if the fuel is a waste product, the gas is just as good.
Any combination of chipped wood and or branches, rice or corn husks, shells, pits, animal dung, in fact any waste organic material, could be used. Even fast growing willow might be planted as a fuel harvest.
Using commercial agricultural waste as a fuel will not just save cash, but also monumental amounts of landfill space. The gasifyer residue, or char, is an excellent soil conditioner, making it a very eco-friendly alternative.
My specialty is more with the usage of a gasifyer to trim house hold expenses and or off grid living.
household gasification has the extra advantage of producing gasses, regularly called syngas, that are very clean burning, producing little or no contamination.
The claim is that 20lbs of dry chipped wood is equivalent to 1 gallon of petrol. A suitably sized gasifier could be made to furnish all the gas for a selected engine, the larger the gasifier the bigger the engine. A gasifyer does not necessarily call for any external power although this will help to start the machine, someone will still have to fuel the machine. Once running the inductance from an internal combustion engine will draw air through the hearth, helpfully making it self sustaining.Check Out The Gasifyer.com
As a green alternate energy source a gasifyer and petrol generator offers a serious solution.
What Does Green Travel Mean?
July 7, 2010 by Contributor
Filed under Travel and Leisure
The terms green travel, eco travel, and green tourism are basically interchangeable. The concepts don’t necessarily refer to vacations with a concentration on nature or wilderness. In fact, green travel can take you anywhere from the Australian Outback to the bustling cities of the U.S.A. and Europe.
To become a green traveler, you simply need to incorporate the basic ideals of green living into your travelling experience. For instance, if you are mindful of recycling at home, you will want to carry that habit over into your traveling and be careful to recycle wherever it is you might journey. Perhaps take a bicycle tour instead of a bus tour, and leave a lighter carbon footprint on the place you are visiting. Don’t litter when visiting someone else’s country, city, or place.
There is also a social context to green travel. You don’t want to do anything that would negatively impact on the eco-structure of the place you are visiting, and neither would you want to do anything that has a negative cultural impact, as well. Be respectful and mindful of tradition and cultural practices. Many societies outside of our own have time honored methods of doing things that differ vastly from ours. Before you visit a foreign place, educate yourself about the traditions and heritage of that region. Green travel extends to socially aware travel. It’s a natural crossroads.
Green travel seeks to turn the negative effects of tourism into something more positive. Travel and touring can be beneficial to a location’s economy and disastrous to its eco-system at the same time. This is particularly important to remember when visiting nature sites. An eco- traveler does everything he or she can to enhance their positive impact and eliminate the negative impact of their visit. Like taking a hiking tour instead of a driving tour, being sure to leave the location as clean or cleaner than when you arrived, purchasing mementos from native artisans instead of purchasing factory-made items from fancy gift shops.
If your idea of eco travel, however, is to experience nature or wilderness, then you may want to visit some of the world’s most exotic green travel destinations, which include:
- Madre De Dios, Peru – Rainforest conservation groups promote ecotourism to the area in the hope of creating an economy that depends upon the rainforest remaining healthy and intact.
- Dubai – The ecotourism industry in Dubai helps to protect the desert habitat and the species that live in it, like the exotic Arabian oryx, a large white antelope that was once close to extinction.
- Great Bear Forest In British Columbia, Canada – A global ecological treasure, this coastal forest extends for 250 miles and is home to rare and exotic bird species.
- The Galapagos Islands – Visitors to the Galapagos are accompanied at all times by an accredited park ranger to ensure that you enjoy the natural beauty of the islands and the threatened wildlife that inhabits these without causing damage to their environment.
- Kerala, India – Known as ‘God’s Own Country’ and one of the most sought-after destinations in Asia, boasting some of the richest biodiversity on the planet.
- Costa Rica – Costa Rica is one of the world’s most sought-after eco-travel destinations, with hundreds of companies that specialize in providing sustainable services.
- New Zealand – One of the most beautiful places on earth, this isolated island country draws ecotourists in droves and engages in environmentally and culturally sensitive tourism strategies and practices at local community, private business and government levels.
Adequate planning can ensure a fantastic green travel experience. In this day and age, all types of eco-friendly options are available to travellers who are willing to plan ahead. You can start your green travel by planning to offset your carbon emissions from air travel. Some airlines, like British Airways, offer you the opportunity to offset the carbon footprint of your trip by making a donation based upon your flight plan. These donations are then made to eco-friendly technologies like hydroelectric production or solar production. Such an offset will generally cost you anywhere from $10 to $50 depending on your flight.
The next thing you might want to consider doing while making your green travel plans is to book lodgings at an environmentally friendly hotel or hostel. There are more and more places to stay that will give you green travel options and they can easily be found on the Internet while planning your trip.
Lastly, try to book activities that are earth friendly rather than not.
These are just a few easy ways that can help make your next holiday a green travel experience.
If you are interested in learning more about ways to go green, save money and help the planet, go to www.FreeTipsForGoingGreen.com and subscribe to receive a FREE email daily containing great green living tips for making your home, office and life greener and more eco friendly. For more details, visit Eco Tourism
Volunteering – The Way Forward
July 7, 2010 by Guest
Filed under Uncategorized
Have you thought about doing some volunteer projects abroad? Maybe volunteering in Tanzania takes your fancy. If you volunteer in Africa today you are heading for one of the greatest experiences of your life. With over a billion people on the African continent and half of them reported to be over the poverty line it’s not surprising that they need your help.
Africa is the world’s second-largest and second most-populous continent, some might say it’s also the most diverse. The continent is made up of 54 countries with the largest of those being Sudan. Unsurprisingly considering the size of the country it’s no surprise to know that parts of Africa as still unexplored. The continent is home to the worlds largest deserts, the Sahara as well as having some of the remotest jungles yet to be explored by man. The state of the African continent is that of desperation. Not only has the continent been ravaged by war over previous decades, the climate is having a profound effect. The constant droughts and floods we see year in year out maybe a wrong doing by the western world causing global warming.
Volunteering is not obviously going to be able to stop the global warming problem. It does however help with the recovery from disasters such as droughts, floods and war. There are many ongoing projects in Africa volunteers get involved with including working with HIV/AIDS orphans, Teaching displaced children, feeding programmes and aid relief.
Volunteering doesn’t just beneift the local communties it also has a profound effect on the volunteer themselves. As a volunteer you can see first hand the change you are making and what kind of effect this is having on the local communtiy. The is a great motivation and helps improve self belief and self drive.


