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  • You know that slimy, gross blob of green

  • you get caught in when you go swimming

  • in a lake or a pool that needs cleaning?

  • That stuff is the best!

  • Hey peeps.

  • Trace here, coming at you from D News.

  • How do you feel about algae?

  • Ambivalent, right?

  • I used to be like that, but no longer.

  • I am on board.

  • I think algae is great, and I don't care who knows it.

  • Algae is amazing.

  • Algae is a blanket term for a large group of plants ranging

  • from single-celled simple organisms

  • to giant kelps and seaweeds.

  • Algae use chlorophyll to produce energy and exhale

  • oxygen, which is great for us.

  • But they can also be used for a ton of other fantastic things.

  • One major thing is algae could be used to produce biofuel.

  • Back in the spring, the Journal of Environmental Science

  • and Technology published a study showing algae

  • could be used to produce 25 billion gallons of biofuel

  • annually in the United States alone,

  • without stressing our water resources.

  • Well, that's only one-twelfth of the way

  • to getting us off fossil fuels altogether.

  • This is just algae, pond scum, slime.

  • You might think oh, man, this biodiesel from algae thing

  • is super complicated.

  • But in reality, they put algae in a press and squeeze it.

  • Boom.

  • Oil.

  • Honestly.

  • That's a lot like an olive press.

  • It gets 75% of the efficiency of the algae.

  • But by adding chemicals to the process,

  • we can get up to 100% of that oil out of the product.

  • And that's not all algae can do.

  • In Hamburg, Germany, a 15-unit apartment building

  • is powered by giant tanks of algae

  • that's living there on the exterior.

  • The plants keep the building cool in the summer

  • and insulate in the winter.

  • Excess heat is funneled into saline tanks to be used later.

  • But that's not all.

  • When the algae is grown enough, it's harvested from the tanks

  • and put into a biomass processor in the basement

  • to be used to power the building.

  • You don't want to make power from algae?

  • That's OK.

  • How about street lamps?

  • Yep.

  • A French biochemist named Pierre Calleja talked about it

  • at Ted X earlier this year.

  • The plan would be to use this CO2-sucking, energy-producing

  • algae to make oxygen and energy, but also

  • use that extra energy to make their bio-luminescence light

  • the streets at night.

  • It's still conceptual, but aside from imagining a city bathed

  • in an otherworldly green awesomeness,

  • you could just get the street lamps

  • and put it on your own head.

  • This is freaky as hell, but maybe could

  • be the future perhaps, maybe?

  • Maybe?

  • I don't know.

  • This is some kind of dystopian, Promethean

  • strangeness, you guys.

  • The little tubes are filled with algae that feed on the CO2

  • exhaled by the wearer and the light

  • hitting the thin tubes from the outside.

  • And when the wearer needs a meal,

  • he or she can just suck some of that algae right

  • into their bodies.

  • The plants are nutritious, though I

  • wouldn't say delicious.

  • Not that I've tried them, except for that one summer

  • at the lake, but that was an accident.

  • Currently the suit, designed by Burton Nitta,

  • is relegated to the realm of strange things, but who knows.

  • If a food crisis hits, we might be willing to try it.

  • Algae, respect.

  • Nice job.

  • Keep up the good work, man.

  • So what do you think?

  • Would you wear the suit, live in the apartment,

  • power your car with this little organism?

  • Tell us about it in the comments below,

  • and click that subscribe button to keep us powered

  • and serving you more D News every day.

You know that slimy, gross blob of green

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