
A high school student from Canada has discovered an ingenious way of converting waste water into electricity.
Austin Wang from Vancouver says he has solved the problem with what to do with the one billion litres of waste water that gets flushed down toilets and sinks every day.
BYPASS THE CENSORS
Sign up to get unfiltered news delivered straight to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe any time. By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Use
Cbc.ca reports:
Austin Wang, who’s won numerous science awards, came up with a way to genetically modify micro-organisms so that they could clean the waste water and generate electricity at the same time.
“Canadians are extremely wasteful,” says the 18-year-old who loves to play basketball and the piano. “On average, we’re worse than Americans.”
His method could possibly generate up to 600 gigawatts of energy from waste biomass.
“If we get efficiencies high enough, it’s theoretically achievable,” says Wang.
An average household in the province uses around 900 kilowatt-hours per month, estimates BC Hydro.
Sean Adl-Tabatabai
Latest posts by Sean Adl-Tabatabai (see all)
- FDA Admits Cancer Treatments Actually CAUSE Cancer - November 30, 2023
- Irish Leader Calls for Irish Protestors To Be ‘Shot in the Head’ - November 30, 2023
- Rothschild Orders Govt’s To Merge With WEF and AI To “Save Capitalism” - November 30, 2023
Yep!! Think plasma too-
Yep!! Think plasma too-