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Seaweed represents an abundant, growing, unattended biomass full of potential.  Researchers in Norway are training bacteria to eat seaweed and produce antibiotics, vitamins, and other food ingredients.
(c) Joan/Unsplash CC0
(c) Joan/Unsplash CC0
  • December 31, 2024

Norwegian scientists produce sustainable antibiotics with seaweed

BBC

Seaweed represents an abundant, growing, unattended biomass full of potential. Researchers in Norway are training bacteria to eat seaweed and produce antibiotics, vitamins, and other food ingredients.

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Everyday actions like opening a door or sliding a window could soon power your home thanks to innovative tech that transforms passive objects into energy generators, creating smarter and more sustainable living spaces.
Previous Post Everyday actions like opening a door could power your home
Next Post Ancient ferns help ecosystems recover from natural disasters
According to a new study, ferns, known to be ancient survivors of extinction events, play a key role in helping ecosystems recover after disasters by facilitating positive interactions among species, emphasizing collaboration over competition in ecological recovery.

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(c) Jean GC

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New research shows that just a few brisk minutes a day — climbing stairs, walking fast, doing chores or gardening — can cut the risk of premature death by up to 40 %, and reduce heart-disease risk by nearly half. These small, natural bursts of movement may become one of the simplest keys to long-lasting health.
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An Essex couple trialled a HeatHub—a mini data-centre in their garden shed with over 500 computers—to heat their home while moving from gas boiler to solar setup. Their monthly bills dropped from about £375 to just £40-£60, blending innovation with home comfort.
Data centre in the shed cuts heating bills down to £40
A new bio-inspired filter developed at the University of Bonn uses the same gill-arch architecture as filter-feeding fish to remove more than 99 % of microplastic fibers from washing machine wastewater. Because it’s self-cleaning and clog-resistant, it could be cheaply built into future washing machines — a clear win for cleaner water and less plastic pollution.
Fish-inspired washing filter captures 99 % of microplastics
The European Commission has launched a plan to slash major journey times on Europe’s high-speed rail network by about 50%, with examples like Berlin–Copenhagen in 4 h instead of 7 by 2030 and Sofia–Athens in 6 h instead of nearly 14 by 2035, while unlocking investment and harmonising systems for faster, greener travel.
Half-the-time rail travel across Europe: speed meets sustainability
France’s Parliament approved a major reform: any sexual act without explicit, informed, revocable consent will now be criminalized. The law defines consent as “free, specific, prior and revocable,” ensuring silence or no reaction is not considered agreement.
France enshrines consent into rape law after Pelicot case
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