We all know that trees are generous givers. They eliminate carbon dioxide, provide a home for little critters, and offer us shade. However, there seems to be one last untapped resource: trees can also produce small amounts of electricity. And now researchers at MIT have begun to develop a way to harness that power so trees can finally do something for themselves: track climate changes that will help minimize damage from forest fires.
Related Posts
-
Trees provide us with oxygen, shade, timber, and…power? That’s what researchers at the University of Washington proved recently when they ran a circuit off energy
-
Researchers are working on developing 200 year-old technology to help firefighters fight blazes with electrical wands instead of water and chemicals. The method uses currents of
-
Residents of San Francisco’s oceanside neighborhoods may complain about it, but the city’s legendary fog does more than just provide character — it also protects
4 Responses to “Fighting Forest Fires with Tree Power”
-
Featured Author
2012 Pritzker Prize Awarded to Wang Shu – First Chinese Architect to Win the Award
Curved House is a Modern Residence with Distinctive Sustainable Strategies in Missouri
Sugarhouse Studios Pop-Up Cinema & Workshop Encourages Community Interaction in London
Luxurious Floating Home Makes the Most of Its Small Footprint on Lake Union in Seattle
This author's twitter feed is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
-
Read Inhabitat
-
Search Categories
-
Recent Posts
-
Recent Comments
-
Browse by Keyword
follow inhabitat on:
popular today
all time
most commented
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
© Inhabitat.com 2012 | About Inhabitat | Contact Us | Advertising with Inhabitat | Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Inhabitat, LLC





















Trees as power ‘plants’?! ‘This is kind of weird, kind of cool!
If it doesn’t harm the tree, as the article says, this is great. Forest fires damage millions of acres of land a year, damage property, kill people, and put many others, e.g. the firefighters, at risk so anything that can give us an advantage over fires is to be welcomed.
But then, if this process can truly be harnessed, couldn’t it be rolled out into other ventures? For example, trees could provide light in our cities at night. Okay, it’s not going to be a lot of light from the trickle charge they produce, but it could be stored during the day,then used at night, maybe with a group of trees all hooked up together. After all, a little light is better than no light. Plus, this ‘natural’ light would mean we didn’t need to burn as much fuel and produce carbon emissions to light our dark areas. Obviously it wouldn’t make a vast difference, but every little helps.
This could also be used for garden lighting which many people like – so reducing power consumption further.
And the knock-on effect would be that trees became much more appreciated! People would take care of them, maybe even plant more. Okay, not for strictly the right reasons, i.e. it would be just another way to bleed resources out of the natural world, but it is a sustainable method. As long as it really does NOT cause the trees harm or stress.
Yeah, I can see many possible uses of this technology.
Good news,
Steve N. Lee
author of eco-blog http://www.lionsledbysheep.com
and suspense thriller ‘What if…?’
[...] turtles may even be brought in to create a completely natural self-policing environment.[Via Inhabitat]Read | Permalink | Email [...]
Huh, that’s interesting. I can’t wait to read more on this when more tests are done. If it’s viable, maybe we can stop cutting so many trees down.
[...] Thanks, MIT. Why don’t you just make the rest of the world feel a little more useless. Every week or so, we’re forced to stare at yet another amazing invention coming from your doors; to be frank, it’s just downright unfair. All childish angst aside, the latest idea to come from the institution is one that could certainly be put to good use: a self-sustaining sensor network that taps into trees for power in order to continuously monitor forests for threats of fire. Moreover, the concept could be applied in other scenarios as well — to detect potential threats such as smuggled contraband along a nation’s borders, perhaps. Testing of the wireless sensor network (developed by the appropriately named Voltree Power) is scheduled to begin next spring, and we’re hearing that pot-sniffing turtles may even be brought in to create a completely natural self-policing environment. [Via Inhabitat] [...]