Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Fight plastic bags with Japanese art of the 8th century

Leave a Comment
One of the great challenges of humanity is to end up with plastic bags. The statement may seem extreme, but the truth is that dozens of cities around the world, are limiting the use of plastic bags, progressively or even abrupt and total.

If we followed this weekend should remember an article we published yesterday, which addresses this need to finish with the plastic bag. Coincidence or not, the episode's 250 green economy approaches the theme but from another perspective: the replacement of the plastic bag by cloths that wrap objects from the Japanese art of furoshiki.

This Japanese art, dating back to the 8th century, contributes to reduce waste and is revalued as an alternative to plastic bags. "The idea is to end up with [plastic bags] and get in fabric-squares of fabric robust in terms of fabric that hold the weight â€" and put it in our belongings, wrap them in tissue in what our grandparents and parents knew as a small backpack," explained to the green economy Susana Domingues, expert in this art.

Susana is responsible for a bet that Japanese arts workhsop for reuse and renew. At a time when every Portuguese spend more plastic bags than the European average â€" about 466 per inhabitant per year â€" the furoshiki and sashiko, another oriental technique, can be a good response to improve our environmental responsibility.

"Sashiko means short cons," says Susana Domingues. "He arose from a need, especially in the lower class of Japan, to stand up to the most rigorous Winters. The idea was for sew-overlap fabrics â€" to become more comfortable but also more cold-resistant ".

Today, these two techniques have other purposes, gaining another importance as mankind moves away of plastic bags and the crisis requires engendering new solutions to reuse objects and clothes.

"I don't know if it's related to the crisis, may be more related to fashion, but it is true that this area of things made by hand are much more sought after," concluded Monica Campanhã, student of one of the workshops taught by Susana Domingues.

See the episode 250 of the green economy.



Foto: goblinbox_ (queen_of_ad_hoc_bento)/Creative Commons

Read More

Monday, May 12, 2014

British newspaper highlights youth and beauty of Braga

Leave a Comment
A young, eclectic city, a few kilometres from the Peneda-Gerês National Park and where you can enjoy walking. It is in this way that the respected British newspaper The Guardian refers to the city of Braga, "one of the oldest of Portugal", but almost always exchanged in Northern radar of tourists, by the harbour.

"I went to Barnard because I wanted to find out why this ancient city-a stronghold of the Roman Empire â€" was selected as the European Capital of Youth in 2012", explains journalist Jeanine Barone in the Saturday edition of The Guardian.

Due to its large student population and integration in the city of several young Portuguese, Braga has an "eclectic vibe, some lively cultural offerings and the bonus of outdoor adventures at the door, due to its proximity of the Peneda-Gerês National Park".

The paper highlights the hostels of the city â€" the hostel frequented by Jeanine offered him a bike for the journalist pedaling, but the offer was swapped with a visit on foot to the city. "The city is conducive to walking, with its cobbled streets and squares. University students can be seen on the terraces and bars, and some of the older buildings have become repositories for art or modern architecture, "says Jeanine.

The journalist highlights the cultural activities of the city, including a visit to the bookstore 100th, a bookshop which occupies a building with a facade from the 18th century. "The quiet life of Braga accelerates when the sun goes down, especially downtown. The intimate sense of the city and its compact size make it easy to visit the numerous bars, and offers a more inviting prospect than trying to enter the vast port offerings, more scattered, "says The Guardian.

Finally, the British newspaper praises the intergenerational interaction which can be seen on the streets of the city, the teenagers to Thrifty. Read the full article, in English, and see some photos of the former Bracara Augusta.

Fotos: AbhijeetRane/Jsome1/Arian Zwegers/TurismoenPortugal/amaianos/Mr Conguito/GOC53/Creative Commons.

. fancybox-wrap {position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; z-index: 8020; }. fancybox-skin {position: relative; /* margin-top: 20px! important; */background: #222222; color: #74b32e; text-shadow: none; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; border-radius: 2px; }. fancybox-opened {z-index: 8030;} . fancybox-opened. fancybox-skin {-webkit-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); -moz-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); }. fancybox-outer,. fancybox-inner {position: relative;} . fancybox-inner {overflow: hidden;} . fancybox-type-iframe. fancybox-inner {-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;} . fancybox-close {background: url('wp-content/themes/codistage/styles/fancybox/exit.png') no-repeat; width: 25px; height: 25px; float: right; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 5px; }/*. ng-gallery-image img {width: 565px; height: 393px;}*/Braga, capital do Minho1of 17jQuery (document). ready (function ($) {var thumbContainerWidth = 0, thumbs = Array (), selectedIndex = 1, thumbIndex = 1, imageOffset = 7; $ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail-box '). each (function () {thumbs.push($(this)); }); /* thumbnail navigation */$ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-next '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex< == (thumbs.length-imageOffset)) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left:-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex]). position (). left}); thumbIndex + +; } }); $ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-prev '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex >1) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left: $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). position (). left + ($ (thumbs [thumbIndex-1]). position (). left-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex-2]). position (). left)}); thumbIndex--; } }); $ (window). load (function () {/* set thumbnail container width */$ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail '). each (function () {thumbContainerWidth = thumbContainerWidth + $ (this). width () + 10; }); $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). width (thumbContainerWidth); }); });

Read More

The end of the plastic bag: a global perspective

Leave a Comment
Every year, worldwide, is used about a billion plastic bags, which amounts to nearly two million bags every minute. The quantity used features large variations among countries in the world. If the Eastern Europeans use more than 400 plastic bags per year, the Danes and Finns use just four bags per year.

Plastic bags are produced using natural gas and oil, and often are only used once. However, these objects have a lifespan of over 100 years, which means that when they are not reused may affect the environment for more than a century.

Over the last century, the plastic taken from planet Earth. If on one hand the plastic seems to be a miraculous material, with various applications ranging from medical devices to the production of cars, on the other he is something of a curse, that allows the mass production of disposables that fill landfills, pollute the oceans and suffocate wildlife.

Full of additives that do not have a safety record, plastics are associated with a series of health problems, including some forms of cancer and infertility. Although the plastics can used and recycled intelligently, most products made from this material are not used consciously. Perhaps no other subject symbolizes so well the consumerist culture of humanity.

The beginning of the end of the age of plastic

Given the multitude of problems associated with the use of plastic bags, many communities have begun trying to break free of the obsession of plastic bags by implementing restrictions on the use or even the prohibition of these objects. The oldest law concerning the use of plastic bags and 1993 date was implemented in Denmark. The law is aimed at producers of plastic bags you have to pay a fee based on the weight of the bags. Was allowed to pass this increased cost to consumers, either through the collection of bags you want by increasing the price of other products. The initial effect of the law was a 60% decrease in the use of plastic bags.

One of the Government measures concerning the use of the bags is the national Ireland bag tax, adopted in 2002. This tax was the first to be taxing consumers directly, starting at 15 cents per bag. Five months after the measure implementation, utilization, and bags fell 90%. However, over the years, the use of the material is back on the rise and, in 2007, the rate was increased to 22 cents per bag. In 2011, was added a menu to the law in order to restrict the annual use of up to 21 bags per person.

Although the Irish tax being the most well known, there are other European countries where consumers pay for bags â€" either through laws or the initiative of commercial spaces. These countries are Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Netherlands, Latvia and Portugal (where many stores charge for bags). Additionally, Member States of the European Union must implement measures to reduce the use of plastic bags in 80% by 2019, referred to Treehugger.

Concern for animals

Reducing the amount of gift bags on marine ecosystems has been one of the main European concerns the environmental level. In the proposal presented by the European Commission reduction reads that "in the North Sea, the stomachs of 94% of all bird species contain plastics or traces of the material".

This concern with the marine animals took Australia to implement measures in 2003, particularly in Tasmania, due to the migration route of the whales. Currently, half of the Australian States have restrictions on the use of the bags.

In addition to the concerns about marine life, the reasons for the implementation of restrictions on the use of plastic relate to outbreaks of malaria, that are associated with the collection and transport of water in bags in Kenya, but also with the drains clogged by sacks in Bangladesh, Cameroon and the Philippines.

In Texas, United States, various animals began to suffocate after ingesting plastic, which led to the regulation of the use of the bags. In India, the concern is with the cows, considered sacred by the Indians. In the capital of Mauritania, 70% of deaths of cattle are related to the ingestion of plastic bags and in the UAE's concern with the camels.

The most severe measure from all over the world, when it comes to the use of bags, is in Rwanda. Since 2008, the bags were banned and the international passengers coming into the country are obliged to deliver to the authorities all the plastic bags to bring with you. It is not clear, however, the success of the measure, particularly in less urban areas because there is a black market for plastic bags.

In South Africa, where it is possible to find abandoned bags in trees, shrubs and other vegetation, the plastic bag was already dubbed the national flower. In 2003, it was implemented a restriction of the use of thin plastic bags that tear easily and thicker bags are taxed. Other 16 African countries have implemented or measures already announced to ban certain types of plastic bags.

In China, where pollution caused by bags has increased exponentially, there are few cities and provinces which try to limit the use. In 1990, began to limit the use of the bags. However, the measure had no effect. In Latin America there are also some initiatives to reduce waste caused by bags. In Chile, the towns of Pucón and Punta Arenas have banned its use.

In Argentina, the States of Buenos Aires and Mendoza also have banned the bags. In some States of Brazil is only allowed the use of biodegradable plastic bags. In January 2012, Sao Paulo has banned the use of plastic bags little resistant, allowing only those of greater durability, which began to be taxed. However, the measure was eventually abolished by a court that, say environmentalists, have been influenced in its decision by the plastics industry.

Read More

Sunday, May 11, 2014

New York ponders building inspired station in extraterrestrial life

Leave a Comment
Two architects of AMLGM Labs conceived a new central station for the neighborhood of Queens, New York. Christening of Urban Alloy Towers, the space is just a hypothetical project, which probably won't come out of the paper. However, if ever realized, the space might serve as a backdrop for science fiction films and aliens, since its shape is futuristic enough to seem like a creation of aliens.

The station would connect with the existing LIRR station in Woodside. The structure was also designed with the environment in mind, it was enhanced energy efficiency and equipped with a kind of veil protector sensitive that regulates the amount of light entering the building, referred to Inhabitat.

The Urban Alloy Towers was also designed in such a way as to take advantage of the remaining spaces involving the intersection and elevated lines LIRR. Thus, the building has a species of arms which extend outwards in the direction of the streets. Seen from above, the building resembles a cross placed on the city's streets.

As for the interior, the space has several complexes, as well as offices and shops. The plans include the construction of a lobby so users can see the rail lines from the commercial area.



. fancybox-wrap {position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; z-index: 8020; }. fancybox-skin {position: relative; /* margin-top: 20px! important; */background: #222222; color: #74b32e; text-shadow: none; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; border-radius: 2px; }. fancybox-opened {z-index: 8030;} . fancybox-opened. fancybox-skin {-webkit-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); -moz-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); }. fancybox-outer,. fancybox-inner {position: relative;} . fancybox-inner {overflow: hidden;} . fancybox-type-iframe. fancybox-inner {-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;} . fancybox-close {background: url('wp-content/themes/codistage/styles/fancybox/exit.png') no-repeat; width: 25px; height: 25px; float: right; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 5px; }/*. ng-gallery-image img {width: 565px; height: 393px;}*/A estação extraterrestre1of 7jQuery (document). ready (function ($) {var thumbContainerWidth = 0, thumbs = Array (), selectedIndex = 1, thumbIndex = 1, imageOffset = 7; $ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail-box '). each (function () {thumbs.push($(this)); }); /* thumbnail navigation */$ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-next '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex< == (thumbs.length-imageOffset)) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left:-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex]). position (). left}); thumbIndex + +; } }); $ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-prev '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex >1) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left: $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). position (). left + ($ (thumbs [thumbIndex-1]). position (). left-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex-2]). position (). left)}); thumbIndex--; } }); $ (window). load (function () {/* set thumbnail container width */$ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail '). each (function () {thumbContainerWidth = thumbContainerWidth + $ (this). width () + 10; }); $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). width (thumbContainerWidth); }); });

Read More

Saturday, May 10, 2014

These are our ancestors

Leave a Comment
Elisabeth Daynès is an artist best-artist fascinated by paleontology-French girl who dedicated his last work to resurrect our ancestors â€" the furthest. Daynès used clay and silicon to make models and realistic sculptures, trying to imagine what they were like the faces of our most distant ancestors.

The creative process begins with the examination of the skull. Later, a computational model tells how artist should be their man, a muscular point of view. Elisabeth also AIDS the scientific literature to decide minor details like eye color, and uses a mixture of human and yak hair for the hominids.

According to the artist, each model is the "synthesis" of all knowledge about the origins of mankind.

Daynès began working with masks to get inside to his passion, the theater, but quickly turned to the evolution of man. In his career of 20 years, the French have recreated Lucy, the famous australopiteca who lived there are one or two million years, and other hominoids and homo erectus.

See some of the work of Daynès, in all phases of your project.

. fancybox-wrap {position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; z-index: 8020; }. fancybox-skin {position: relative; /* margin-top: 20px! important; */background: #222222; color: #74b32e; text-shadow: none; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; border-radius: 2px; }. fancybox-opened {z-index: 8030;} . fancybox-opened. fancybox-skin {-webkit-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); -moz-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); }. fancybox-outer,. fancybox-inner {position: relative;} . fancybox-inner {overflow: hidden;} . fancybox-type-iframe. fancybox-inner {-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;} . fancybox-close {background: url('wp-content/themes/codistage/styles/fancybox/exit.png') no-repeat; width: 25px; height: 25px; float: right; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 5px; }/*. ng-gallery-image img {width: 565px; height: 393px;}*/Os nossos antepassados1of 20jQuery (document). ready (function ($) {var thumbContainerWidth = 0, thumbs = Array (), selectedIndex = 1, thumbIndex = 1, imageOffset = 7; $ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail-box '). each (function () {thumbs.push($(this)); }); /* thumbnail navigation */$ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-next '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex< == (thumbs.length-imageOffset)) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left:-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex]). position (). left}); thumbIndex + +; } }); $ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-prev '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex >1) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left: $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). position (). left + ($ (thumbs [thumbIndex-1]). position (). left-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex-2]). position (). left)}); thumbIndex--; } }); $ (window). load (function () {/* set thumbnail container width */$ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail '). each (function () {thumbContainerWidth = thumbContainerWidth + $ (this). width () + 10; }); $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). width (thumbContainerWidth); }); });

Read More

YoungVolunTeam gets to ride the Rock In Rio and travels 93 Portuguese schools

Leave a Comment
Released in November 2012, the YoungVolunTeam is the educational program of the Caixa Geral de Depósitos directed students who attend secondary school. The program has the support of Out of the shell, Entrajuda, the General Directorate of education and the youth in action programme, the European Union, and this year with a special push: Rock In Rio (Laugh).

Thus, the CGD and Rock In Rio asked the students of all secondary schools covered organize an action for funds to support a social cause. This Union of social projects â€" Young VolunTeam and Laugh â€" enabled the first go further in its aim to raise funds for the creation or reinforcement of homerooms in IPSS (charities).

"We intend to equip homerooms, insofar as we believe that education is an essential vehicle to break cycles of poverty, thereby promoting social inclusion. We have the energy and determination of Secondary school students to help give back, "said Francisco Viana, director of communications and branding of the box.

Promoting the culture of volunteering in Portugal has been, moreover, one of the main commitments of action of CGD â€" in this case, with the groupings of secondary schools across the country, strengthening the recognition of the importance of the contribution of these to the development of fundamental skills for young people, in different axes: social inclusion, education, entrepreneurship, employment and citizenship.

This year's Edition, the Young VolunTeam featured the inscription of 93 high schools across the country, with a total of 185 teachers coordinators and 2,400 students ambassadors of the program in their schools and surrounding communities.

This action with the Rock In Rio is paradigmatic of the importance of the project â€" and how far he can go. In it, the groups of students from ten schools with better provision will be invited to continue the action of raising funds in Rock in Rio-Lisbon, where they can also enjoy and watch the concerts and entertainments of the Cidade do Rock.

This initiative will be extended to employees still in the box, which could help in fund raising, as well as the community as a whole, that can contribute directly through a sympathetic account. A real project of social inclusion.

Foto: 【Jã€'/Creative Commons

Read More

Friday, May 9, 2014

New York: cruise ship collides with rare whale

Leave a Comment
A sei whale, the third largest species of whales in the world and who is at risk of extinction, washed up dead last Sunday, in Brooklyn, New York, after having collided with a Norweigan Cruise Line cruise.

The whale, of 13.7 meters, was hit by the 323-metre vessel, but New York authorities still do not know if she was alive or dead before this accident. The ship, which was returning from a seven-day trip through the Caribbean, had to stay several hours in the port of New York â€" just when the tug arrived, in fact, is that the authorities noticed in the presence of the whale.

According to Maggie Moone-Their National, Oceanica and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the whale's carcass was transported to the Army Corps of Engineers, in New Jersey, while the be autopsied by biologists of The Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation.

"Our team of necropsy spent all day [with the whale] and noticed several traumatic injuries, broken ribs and a bruise on the right side of the animal," said the executive director of The Riverside Foundation, Robert DiGiovianni, at The Huffington Post.

Still, only within several weeks to know if the ship killed the sei whale, or if this was already dead when she was hit by a boat. According to The New York Post, the whale is now buried.

. fancybox-wrap {position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; z-index: 8020; }. fancybox-skin {position: relative; /* margin-top: 20px! important; */background: #222222; color: #74b32e; text-shadow: none; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; border-radius: 2px; }. fancybox-opened {z-index: 8030;} . fancybox-opened. fancybox-skin {-webkit-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); -moz-box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: 0 10px 25px rgba (0, 0, 0, 0.5); }. fancybox-outer,. fancybox-inner {position: relative;} . fancybox-inner {overflow: hidden;} . fancybox-type-iframe. fancybox-inner {-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;} . fancybox-close {background: url('wp-content/themes/codistage/styles/fancybox/exit.png') no-repeat; width: 25px; height: 25px; float: right; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 5px; }/*. ng-gallery-image img {width: 565px; height: 393px;}*/Aerial-sei collide com navio1of 10jQuery (document). ready (function ($) {var thumbContainerWidth = 0, thumbs = Array (), selectedIndex = 1, thumbIndex = 1, imageOffset = 7; $ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail-box '). each (function () {thumbs.push($(this)); }); /* thumbnail navigation */$ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-next '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex< == (thumbs.length-imageOffset)) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left:-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex]). position (). left}); thumbIndex + +; } }); $ ('. ng-greensavers-thumb-prev '). unbind (). bind (' click ', function (e) {e.preventDefault(); if (thumbIndex >1) {$ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). stop (). animate ({left: $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). position (). left + ($ (thumbs [thumbIndex-1]). position (). left-$ (thumbs [thumbIndex-2]). position (). left)}); thumbIndex--; } }); $ (window). load (function () {/* set thumbnail container width */$ ('. ng-gallery-thumbnail '). each (function () {thumbContainerWidth = thumbContainerWidth + $ (this). width () + 10; }); $ ('. ng-thumbnails-container '). width (thumbContainerWidth); }); });

Read More