R&D began in nanotech began in 2002. Later used in a small field pilot with carbon reduction integration. Current field prototype can scale to solar utility, minigrids, charging station infrastructure. Construction began in 2018 for bifacial solar panels over end-of-life (EOL), recycled materials and circular building products field tested in an urban area with high pollution impacting efficiency, testing performed Q1 2022 - Q3 2023.
Circular Solar is patent-pending and supports some IEA central pillars and 2030 targets.
Details available to potential partners under NDA.
These solutions and tests were made to meet California and Turkiye's ZeroWaste criteria More about the UN Global ZeroWaste Initiative:
https://www.un.org/en/observances/zero-waste-day & http://zerowaste.gov.tr/
We all have experienced albedo effect of heat and infrastructure. You place your hand or barefoot on hot, dark asphalt, then onto grass or a light colored concrete sidewalk - what a difference!
Our whole planet is impacted in a similar way. Buildings, homes, roads, parks and even energy such as solar, wind, batteries and components.
Here is an Albedo Effect image and great read by Mr. Steven Earle, Author of Physical Geology, see Chapter 19 for: What Makes The Climate Change? It does a deep dive into "climate forcing" and "feedbacks" which impacts Climate Change and gives insight for how to manage the Paris Agreement 1.5C threshold and global warming.
This albedo scale graphic and article is from 2017. Unfortunately, heating has continued, from melting ice sheets (West Antartica) to evaporation occurring at major bodies of water (Colorado River) has progressed. It is impacting the 1.5C threshold.
COP28 is happening right now. Climate Change is the topic and the answer is "Tripling renewable power capacity by 2030 would deliver about a third of the emissions reductions needed this decade to move the world to a pathway aligned with 1.5 °C".
But, what is Albedo Effect and what is its impact on Global Warming that affects climate changes? We have been thinking about this for decades, researching, designing, then supporting Cherise's prototypes and testing for quick scalability. Our solutions use waste as infrastructure to support this critical albedo scale for increasing renewable power efficiency and even DAC (direct-air-capture) for reduction of climate changing emissions.
Source, IEA tripling renewables:
Also to be considered: "Troubling picture of Antarctica ice shelves: Study finds 40% volume lost in 25 years": https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/climate-change/troubling-picture-of-antarctica-ice-shelves-study-finds-40-volume-lost-in-25-years-92280
2023 is expected to the be the warmest on record. 2023 WMO Climate Report. It's 7 pages and the word "record" is used about 40 times...
https://wmo.int/resources/publications/provisional-state-of-global-climate-2023
Pavement, roads, buildings and land have Albedo Effect that impacts climate changes. The structure to landscaping, materials, color and air temperature impact eachother.
Blacktop temperature is the highest due to its material and color and is an ultra low albedo value.
Solar-wind-battery-grid charging are also impacted by climate and infrastructure. High heat or cold impacts charging, discharging rates.
This is an E-scooter battery, representing an EV battery in a vehicle. For fast charging or for mitigating battery degradation of EVs hot regions they need cooler infrastructure.
How can solar integration help? The brown tarp in the previous image is now laid out below a solar panel. Look at the thermal mapping of it where the solar panel shades the material. It is much cooler! This improves charging and the panel also shades the water below it (solar canals) less evaporation and more benefits.
Now taken from an elevated view we see the shaded area thermals are similar to the white tarp like material (vinyl).
Notice the bottom left area of the white vinyl? See how there is more pollution build up? That's transportation pollution (port, vehicle, rail, plane) dirty fossil fuel pollution heats infrastructure too.
Now taken from an elevated view we see the shaded area thermals are similar to the white tarp like material (vinyl).
Notice the bottom left area of the white vinyl? See how there is more pollution build up? That's transportation pollution (port, vehicle, rail, plane) dirty fossil fuel pollution heats infrastructure too.
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