Quote of the Day: “True imagination is not fanciful daydreaming; it is fire from heaven.” – Ernest Holmes
Photo by: Jan Canty
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The Minneapolis City Council voted unanimously to approve a pre-trial settlement with the family of a 46-year-old whose homicide by one of its police officers was caught on camera and outraged the nation, sparking protests worldwide.
Chicago Avenue memorial artwork – Jéan Béller
The $27 million award to the family of George Floyd comes as jury selection continues for officer Derek Chauvin’s murder trial.
Attorney Ben Crump, who has represented the family, filing suit last June, announced that $500,000 from the settlement will go towards helping neighborhood businesses around 38th and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, where George was killed, and to tend the memorial that sprung up there.
“This historic agreement, the largest pre-trial settlement in a civil rights wrongful death case in U.S. history, makes a statement that George Floyd’s life mattered and by extension that Black lives matter,” said Crump.
George’s sister, Bridgett Floyd, said, “While our hearts are broken, we are comforted in knowing that even in death, George Floyd showed the world how to live.”
The family’s attorney argued that the city had been negligent for failing to properly train police and not firing officers like Chauvin, who had dozens of complaints previously been filed against him during his 19-year tenure.
The other three officers who were on the scene with Chauvin in May 2020, are due to go on trial later this year on charges of aiding and abetting the reckless cop in Floyd’s death.
GoodRx is a website and mobile app that compares medication prices to help Americans get the best deal on drugs—but his month they launched a philanthropic initiative that provides medications for free to low-income patients who need more than a bargain.
– National Cancer Institute
In its first phase, GoodRx Help has partnered with the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics (NAFC) to fully subsidize the cost of nearly 1,000 medications at 23 clinics in 16 states, including California, Texas, Florida, and New York.
To fund the initiative, following the company’s initial public offering, GoodRx has contributed more than 1 million shares, valued at over $40 million (as of December 18).
The charity characterized its promise in a press release, calling it a multi-year commitment which is expected to provide over $5 million worth of medications in 2021, its first year.
“We know there are times when discounts aren’t enough,” said GoodRx co-founder Doug Hirsch. “With GoodRx Helps, we hope to assist more patients who feel they’ve run out of options, especially in underserved communities that disproportionately face greater challenges when seeking affordable care.”
GoodRx, which was launched in 2011, estimates that increased unemployment resulted in 56 million fewer prescriptions filled during the first six months of the pandemic.
How it works
Medical providers simply enroll patients into the program, and GoodRx then sends the medication for free to the clinic for the patient’s use. The clinics selected for the program primarily serve communities with low income patients.
“Medication affordability is one of the top issues facing patients at Free and Charitable Clinics and Pharmacies throughout the country,” said Nicole Lamoureux, NAFC President and CEO. “We are thrilled that GoodRx recognizes this need and has chosen to partner with the NAFC on this important program to help patients receive medications that they need at no cost.”
GoodRx partnered with the NAFC because of the association’s extensive knowledge and expertise in working with nonprofit clinics and underserved patients.
A participating clinic in Katy, Texas is already praising the program.
“The additional financial assistance GoodRx Helps has brought to many of our patients’ lives is incomparable,” said Janeth Arteaga Castilleja, Medication Coordinator at Christ Clinic. “This program allows our patients to have one less thing to worry about when it comes to their healthcare. GoodRx Helps has been a blessing in the middle of chaos.”
A dinghy full of tourists saw the nature film of a lifetime, right in front of their eyes.
A gentoo penguin that was being chased by a pod of orcas made a desperation leap for safety into their boat.
The successful jump happened only after a first attempt had failed, when the small animal flung itself headfirst into the side of the boat and bounced back into the perilous water.
Travel blogger Matt Karsten and his wife Anna were taking a tour through the icebergs of the Gerlache Strait in Antarctica, when they saw the incredible chase unfold.
In the video below, the life-saving leap happens at 2:00, ending the long chase scene…
This is not the first time humans have been at the right place at the right time to help out. An otter in Halibut Cove was in similar trouble, and swam frantically toward safety as the orca followed.
It reached John Dornellas’ boat and climbed onto the stern just as the orca closed in. He returned to the deck of the boat three times until the coast was clear.
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Sixty-five percent of Americans said the pandemic has provided them with a “wake-up call” to reach out to their communities.
By Alex Mecl
And a new survey of 2,000 Americans revealed more than half are doing just that by volunteering.
In fact, 52% reported volunteering in their communities for the very first time as a result of the circumstances brought on by the pandemic.
Delivering food to essential workers (35%), volunteering to help the elderly or incapacitated maintain their homes (23%) and volunteering at a food pantry (20%) were among the most common ways respondents had volunteered since the start of the pandemic.
Yet seven out of 10 respondents reported that, while the effects of COVID-19 on their community made them more eager to volunteer, they’ve hesitated due to safety concerns.
The survey also examined the safety precautions that would make them feel more confident lending a helping hand in their communities.
Among those who agreed that they had hesitated to volunteer due to safety concerns, 56% reported concern about the availability of hand-washing and hand sanitizing stations, making this the most common worry.
Other common concerns among this group included whether or not mask-wearing would be required at the site (50%) and whether or not social distancing would be mandated (44%).
“To avoid anxiety about supplies at job sites, be sure to bring your own bottle of hand sanitizer to help you and others stay safe,” said Tara Merkle, of Muse Health Hand Sanitizer, which sponsored the poll.
For over a third of respondents, the motivation to volunteer came from close to home. 35% reported that their primary reason for stepping up was knowing about friends and neighbors in need, which made them want to contribute.
And 17% said their friends and neighbors who were helping out inspired them to do the same.
The uptick in volunteering may well continue post-pandemic, too, according to the survey, conducted by OnePoll.
73% agreed that while donating money or items to help the community is great, using their hands to get out there and do the work is more fulfilling.
Best of all, nearly seven in 10 reported that, as more people become vaccinated, they hope to increase their time spent volunteering.
AmeriCorps
MOST COMMON VOLUNTEER ACTIVITIES SINCE THE START OF THE PANDEMIC
Delivering food to essential workers (35%)
Volunteering to help elderly or incapacitated neighbors maintain their homes (23%)
Collecting items for food pantries (21%)
Volunteering at a food pantry (20%)
Donating blood (19%)
“It’s commendable, and heartening, to see so many Americans stepping up to lend a helping hand in their communities during this challenging time,” added Tara, whose company is celebrating the selfless individuals who are giving back.
Need more positive stories and updates coming out of the COVID-19 challenge? For more uplifting coverage, click here.
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Quote of the Day: “The only person you are destined to become is the person you decide to be.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Photo by: Vladislav Babienko
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An English family has been astounded to find themselves at the center of a major scientific discovery that’s had scientists weak at the knees—as their driveway has been hit by the most valuable space rock ever to fall on Britain.
SWNS
In late February, in the home she shares with her mom and dad, Hannah Wilcock heard a dull, thumping noise outside her window.
She looked out to see where the sounds were coming from, but because it was dark she couldn’t see what it was.
Her first guess? Someone in the Cotswolds must be driving around, and throwing lumps of coal in people’s driveways for some reason.
She went and spoke to her mom Cathryn. Given the recent mild weather, they decided maybe a disposable charcoal grill had been dumped?
That might explain the strange sounds.
Of course, it was neither of those things.
SWNS
What was hitting their Gloucestershire home was, in fact, carbonaceous chondrite—a dark, stony material that retains unaltered chemistry from the formation of our Solar System 4.6 billion years ago.
When Open University planetary scientist Richard Greenwood looked at the Wilcocks’ picture of what had landed outside their front door, he was blown away, and was soon despatched to take a look.
SWNS
“It was one of those moments when your legs start going wobbly,” he told the BBC. “I saw this thing; it was like a splat across [the] drive; and it had all these rays coming off it; and I just thought—that is a meteorite. It was instantaneous.”
Such a rare find could fetch high prices from a collector, but the Wilcock family would rather the fortuitous ‘coal lumps’ in their backyard go to science rather than onto a collector’s shelves.
After all, these meteors could give scientists real, fresh insights into how our very planet came into being.
Intravenous injection of bone marrow derived stem cells in patients with spinal cord injuries led to significant improvement in motor functions, researchers from Yale University and Japan have reported.
For more than half of the patients studied, substantial improvements in key functions—such as ability to walk, or to use their hands—were observed within weeks of stem cell injection, the researchers report. No substantial side effects were reported.
The patients had sustained non-penetrating spinal cord injuries, in many cases from falls or minor trauma, several weeks prior to implantation of the stem cells. Their symptoms involved loss of motor function and coordination, sensory loss, as well as bowel and bladder dysfunction.
The stem cells were prepared from the patients’ own bone marrow, via a culture protocol that took a few weeks in a specialized cell processing center. The cells were injected intravenously in this series, with each patient serving as their own control. Results were not blinded and there were no placebo controls.
Kocsis and Waxman stress that additional studies will be needed to confirm the results of this preliminary, unblinded trial. They also stress that this could take years. Despite the challenges, they remain optimistic.
“Similar results with stem cells in patients with stroke increases our confidence that this approach may be clinically useful,” noted Kocsis. “This clinical study is the culmination of extensive preclinical laboratory work using MSCs between Yale and Sapporo colleagues over many years.”
“The idea that we may be able to restore function after injury to the brain and spinal cord using the patient’s own stem cells has intrigued us for years,” Waxman said. “Now we have a hint, in humans, that it may be possible.”
Source: YaleNews
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We see them nearly everywhere we go, we hear them every day, they live in every environment, and now, two new studies have shown their mere presence makes us happier.
German research has even found that being surrounding by a wide variety of birds can offer increasing life satisfaction equivalent to $150 per week of added income.
On the surprising benefits of species diversity
Johannes Plenio
The German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research took data from the 2012 European quality of Life Survey to measure how species diversity in birds affected 26,000 people in 26 European countries.
“According to our findings, the happiest Europeans are those who can experience numerous different bird species in their daily life, or who live in near-natural surroundings that are home to many species,” explains the study’s lead author, Joel Methorst a professor at Goethe University in Frankfurt, in a press release.
“We also examined the socio-economic data of the people that were surveyed, and, much to our surprise, we found that avian diversity is as important for their life satisfaction as is their income,” explains Prof. Dr. Katrin Böhning-Gaese, also at Goethe University.
On bird song and well-being
Bernd Thaller, CC license
In the second study of note, California Polytechnic University covertly subjected Colorado hikers to a test that measured their sense of well-being by placing speakers that played a variety of bird song along certain sections of a popular hiking trial network—then interviewing the hikers about their experience.
“While the bigger picture of nature’s restorative properties is likely to involve multiple senses, our study is the first to experimentally manipulate a single one (sound) in the field and demonstrate its importance to human experiences in nature,” said Danielle Ferraro, to the university press.
Indeed, hikers on the trials that perceived both more sounds and more varied sounds said they felt better about life, and about their experience hiking, than those who heard both fewer sounds, and less sound altogether.
Nesting season
Danny Perez Photography, CC license
The benefits of birding—hearing their song, noticing the species around us—is a good thing too. A recent report from the Audubon Society found that sales of bird feeders, bird food, and birding apps have all increased during the pandemic, while participations in the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s annual Global Big Day 2020 shattered all previous records.
During the Big Day, participants logged 2.1 million sightings of 6,500 species. An all-time high of 50,000 participants submitted more than 120,000 checklists, shattering the previous single-day checklist total by 30%.
Nesting season is fast approaching, and with lockdowns continuing in many states and countries, there’s never been a better time to take up birdwatching—and, if you can, to make your property a positive habitat for avians.
For a little girl growing up in Colombia in the 1980s, a science career with NASA may have seemed about as likely as setting foot on a faraway planet. These days, however, Diana Trujillo is an aerospace engineer.
In fact, she leads a 45-person team at the NASA laboratory that’s responsible for the robotic arm of the latest Mars rover.
NASA/JPL-Caltech, illustration of the Perseverance rover landing
How did Diana go from simply dreaming about the cosmos to actually exploring it? That’s a tale of perseverance that was, perhaps, written in the stars.
Born in 1983, even as a young girl Diana was certain of her passion for science. But she doubted how far she’d be able to rise in a male-dominated field. Fate stepped in when her dad—thinking having a second language might expand his daughter’s horizons—offered to send her to live with an aunt in Miami.
Only 17 years old at the time, she took him up on it.
With just $300 to her name, Trujillo took a series of housekeeping jobs to put herself through Miami Dade College. In addition to learning English, she studied aerospace engineering. It wasn’t easy. Sometimes she had to take six buses just to get to class. Other days she was cleaning bathrooms to help pay her way through her studies. But she didn’t complain.
“I saw everything coming my way as an opportunity,” Diana told CBS News. “I didn’t see it as: ‘I can’t believe I’m doing this job at night, or “I can’t believe that I’m cleaning a bathroom right now.’ It was just more like, ‘I’m glad that I have a job and I can buy food and have a house to sleep… ’”
Then came another life-changing moment for Trujillo. One of her professors casually mentioned they were actually acquainted with an astronaut. Realizing she was “just one person away from knowing an astronaut” was all it took to galvanize Diana’s career goals.
Trujillo continued with her studies. Becoming the first Hispanic woman to be admitted to the NASA Academy, she did so well she was one of only two students to receive a job offer from the prestigious institution.
A story of perseverance
While at the NASA Academy, she was introduced to robots expert Brian Roberts. Recognizing her potential, he invited Trujillo to join his NASA space robotics research team at the University of Maryland, where she went on to earn her Bachelor’s degree in Aerospace Engineering in 2007.
Later that year, she became a team member at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Since then, Trujillo has worn many hats at America’s space agency, including as Mission Lead for the Curiosity Rover in 2014—for which she got the nod as one of the 20 most influential Latinos in the Technology Industry.
A voice for everyone
Diana hasn’t stopped there. This February, when the Perseverance rover landed on the surface of Mars, it was accompanied by commentary from Trujillo in what became NASA’s first-ever Spanish-language transmission.
She followed up that coup by hosting the agency’s first-ever Spanish language broadcast, Juntos perseveramos (Together we Persevere), which has since gone on to rake in more than 2.5 million hits on YouTube.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Trujillo has won numerous awards in her field, most recently, the Congress of Colombia’s order of merit Policarpa Salavarrieta.
Encouraging others to reach for the stars
Along with her ongoing scientific endeavors, Diana Trujillo continues her mission to lead by example, encouraging women from marginalized backgrounds to pursue careers in STEM fields.
If it takes a rocket to shatter the glass ceiling, so be it. Diana’s own story is proof that just beyond that barrier lies an entire universe of opportunities waiting for anyone willing to work hard enough to reach for the stars.
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The Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh must be one of the most recognizable paintings in Western art.
The original—a rich and mysterious whirl of oil on canvas—is on display at MoMa in New York City. But the version that lit up the sky in China? Well, it’s like no rendition that’s ever been seen before.
A local drone production company partnered with Tianjin University to create the light show called A Tribute to Van Gogh.
To project the painting onto the night sky, 600 drones were deployed—successfully setting a Guinness World Record for the longest animation performed by unmanned aerial vehicles.
The dazzling show lasted 26 minutes and 19 seconds, with the impressive display requiring high-precision positioning technology that coordinated and synchronized the drones.
Watch the video and you’ll see homages not just to The Starry Night, but also Van Gogh’s life-affirming Sunflowers, The Mulberry Tree in Autumn, and Wheat Field with Cypresses.
(PLAY the Guinness World Records video below.)
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Quote of the Day: “The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why.” – Mark Twain
Photo by: Ameen Fahmy
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It took decades of cultural change mixed with legislative progress and increasing commercial viability to bring widespread use of cannabis and cannabis derivatives to the U.S. consumer.
Following close on “Mary Jane’s” heels are “Lucy and Molly,” as the overwhelming evidence for the use of psychedelics and psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy as a treatment for the worst sort of mental health disorders has some entrepreneurs bringing psychedelic companies to the stock exchange—despite the fact that only Oregon has legalized private possession of psilocybin mushrooms.
With a background in business and marketing, Matt Stang, who is now Founder and CEO of Delic Holdings, took over High Times Magazine 18 years ago as part of a long journey at the forefront of the effort to legalize cannabis.
“After the overwhelming response in the United States to legalization in the 2016 and 2020 elections, where cannabis has really kind of pushed through and tipped over to the point where there’s no putting that genie back in the bottle, we started focusing on what we think are the next tipping points: psychedelics,” Stang told GNN in an interview.
Buying a series of ketamine-infusion treatment centers in California, Matt started Delic with his wife Jackee in the hopes of having a roadmap ready for when U.S. states inevitably begin to allow—at least medically—the use of these substances. Their centers, the company’s principle assets, have been operating for 15 years, have generated $1.5 million in revenue, and conducted over 4,000 treatment courses.
“When we created it two years ago there was no such thing as a ‘psychedelic corporation’, so people thought we were a little crazy,” says Stang. “We think similar pathways have been blazed for cannabis that will help psychedelics get through on a much quicker track.”
Matt and Jackee Stang
Unassailable results
Stang believes strongly that the last 20 years of research on psychedelic-use and assisted-therapies for things like treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, childhood trauma, and more, is undeniable for anyone who actually wants to get help to people in need.
Indeed, the Center for Psychedelic Research at Johns Hopkins has demonstrated therapeutic success ratios rarely—if ever—attained with traditional antidepressants. Their most recent study found that 67% of trial participants using psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy had a 71% reduction in treatment-resistant depression after a four-week follow-up.
By waqas anees – CC license
“The magnitude of the effect we saw was about four times larger than what clinical trials have shown for traditional antidepressants on the market,” Alan Davis, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences who was involved with the study, hassaid.
Ketamine, used by Stang in his clinics, is the only FDA-approved psychedelic for use as a mental health fortifier.
“The amazing power of these substances to help with PTSD and trauma squarely puts it right in the veteran’s lap,” explains Stang. “You know I’ve seen veterans who have gone in for ketamine treatments… I saw a giant bear of a man at a clinic in San Diego who was crying, and he said [without these treatments] ‘I wouldn’t be alive, I wouldn’t have my family.'”
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for veterans conducted by the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) is currently in extended-Phase III FDA trials as a “breakthrough therapy.” It’s expected to be available by 2023.
Though not related to depression, Johns Hopkins has also studied MDMA and even the much-talked about DMT, called the “Spirit Molecule” by one documentarian. Their results found interesting effects, such as an increase in overall life satisfaction by 89% from the latter, and neuro-reactivation of critical learning pathways with the former.
From grey to white
As strong as the science is and as wonderful as the results are, the cannabis campaigns demonstrated that until there’s tax revenue, states won’t take legalizing drugs very seriously.
As one of the first publicly traded psychedelic-related corporations, Matt and Jackee’s hopes with Delic are to create a distributive and educational entity that will immediately give thousands of people a place to safely purchase quality products, and get the best information about where psychedelic wellness centers are located.
“For us, going public was both an opportunity to allow people to participate in the nascent psychedelic revolution, and also a great opportunity to help utilize the public capital to build a real, cashflow generating, long term business,” Stang tells GNN.
“What I’ve seen from doing this for nearly 20 years in cannabis is that when a grey market goes white, having a platform to define what is best in class is probably the most important thing because people don’t know what they’re looking for, they just know something’s happening that’s changing the world.”
Expanding on the line of ketamine clinics, Delic is in conversations with a company that has designed the first medically-authorized vape platform for psilocybin, to deliver a single dose of the compound that gives magic mushrooms their magic, in a way that’s familiar to those who vape with cannabis. Many people who administer psilocybin do so in the comfort of their own homes, thanks to instructions provided by Tripsitter in their guide detailing how to grow magic mushrooms at home using a variety of methods, including PF tek, wild bird seek tek, and agar tek.
Other products would include a nano-encapsulation delivery method that allows the psilocybin to avoid absorption in the liver, remaining instead in the blood where it becomes far more bioavailable, allowing for a quicker delivery of the experience that could perhaps reach different pathways in the brain, thereby expanding the range of treatable regions.
Both are in development, and would require both a laboratorial and legal landscape to exist before either could potentially add to Delic’s market share.
Delic also does grassroots organizing and lobbying, and several times Stang mentioned the 2022 midterm elections as a key moment to see compounds like psilocybin, MDMA, and others on the ballot in progressive states.
As the mental and behavioral health fallout from the 2020-2021 lockdown seasons have yet to reveal their true extent, the need for safe legal products and treatments with these compounds could be greater than ever, and like all good entrepreneurs, Stang is anticipating where the demand will be.
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There are things about the island of Cuba that don’t make the news—for example, it has the world’s largest biodiversity of snails.
Thomas Brown, CC license
The painted snail, polymita, is one of the most beautiful invertebrates on Earth and found only on this Caribbean island. Its shell is a wondrous spiral—all in colors of peach, lemon-lime, vermillion, blood orange, red ochre, and even pink.
Unfortunately the illegal wildlife trade has brought all six species of polymita to the point of being critically endangered, as recommended by Cuban wildlife researchers.
Recently, National Geographic reported on the love of polymita by the Italian photographer Bruno D’Amicis, who traveled to the island in order to photograph them in their natural habitat. He hopes to draw attention to the fact that demand for the snail shells in Cuba and abroad as colorful trinkets is driving them to extinction.
Scientists know that they live in a small vegetated coastal belt along the eastern shore of Cuba, but they don’t know how many there are, or even if they’ve discovered all of the existing species.
In their natural environment, the painted snails live in trees and shrubs devouring mineral-rich moss and lichen, the source of their brilliant colors. Their incessant eating of this vegetation help keep trees healthy, including on coffee farms—a huge part of the Cuban economy.
As prey, the snail feed the endangered Cuban kite and other endemic animals. Flashy color displays in nature are generally stemming from one of a few different reasons, such as a warning of toxicity, or to attract mates, but the purpose behind the polymita painted shells is still unknown.
According to a lead scientist studying the snails, Bernardo Reyes-Tur, speaking with Nat Geo he said, “some individuals stay in the same spot for six months.”
Cuban wildlife biologists are attempting to educate both farmers in the region, especially coffee and tobacco farmers and foreign visitors, about the importance of the snail to the island. Studying their natural environment, biologists hope to establish a breeding program for them—as their slow, sedentary lifestyles make them extremely vulnerable to both poaching and climate change.
The biologists are looking to demonstrate to people who earn their living from tourists that the snails are worth more alive than dead. Because their only home on Earth is Cuba, even though it is a socialist economy, it has cornered ‘the market’ on painted snails, and wildlife enthusiasts would be forced to visit if they wanted to see these glorious invertebrates in nature.
Featured image: Rafael Medina
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Asphalt with the additive TonerPlas, made from mixed soft plastics, is used to resurface a roadway in Fremantle, Western Australia, in 2020/Close The Loop
Asphalt with the additive TonerPlas, made from mixed soft plastics, is used to resurface a roadway in Fremantle, Western Australia, in 2020/Close The Loop
This article first appeared in Yale Environment 360 and is re-printed with permission.
A road running through Accra, Ghana’s capital, looks like any other blacktop. Yet what most drivers don’t realize is that the asphalt under them contains a slurry of used plastics—shredded and melted bags, bottles, and snack wraps—that otherwise were destined for a landfill.
The impetus for many similar road projects underway in Ghana was an ambitious plan announced by President Akufo-Addo in 2018. It calls for Ghanaians to strive for a circular model, to recycle and reuse as much plastic waste as they produce each year—roughly 1.1 million tons—by 2030.
Barely 5 percent of the 5,000 tons of plastic that Ghanaians discard each day makes it to recycling facilities. The rest winds up in landfills, illegal dumps, streets, and waterways, or is burned in open pits, poisoning the air.
In a developing nation, “it’s difficult to recycle plastic,” noted Heather Troutman, program manager of the Ghana National Plastic Action Partnership. “It’s expensive, complicated, technical, and much easier just to burn it. But if you could put value on recycled plastic,” by turning it into fishing nets, fuel, or paving material, “it won’t get buried; it won’t get burned; it won’t make it to the ocean.”
First appearing in India two decades ago, plastic roads are being tested and built in more and more countries as the world’s plastic pollution problem becomes more acutely felt. India has installed over 60,000 miles of these roads. The technology, meanwhile, is gaining ground in Britain, Europe, and Asia. Several countries—South Africa, Vietnam, Mexico, the Philippines, and the United States, among them—have built their first plastic roads only recently.
A growing number of studies say that roads containing waste plastic have the potential to perform as well or better than traditional roads. They can last longer, are stronger and more durable in respect to loads and rutting, can tolerate wide temperature swings, and are more resistant to water damage, cracking, and potholes.
The technology also has the potential to reclaim anywhere from a small to a sizeable amount of plastics from landfills and random dumping, researchers are finding, while providing a significant amount for road paving and repair. In a small nation like Ghana, where only 23 percent of roads are presently paved, waste plastic could go a long way.
“We have to be realistic at some point in how we try to remediate the vast problem of plastic pollution,” Doug Woodring, the founder of Ocean Recovery Alliance, said in an email. “I believe plastic roads, if done to scale, in combination with other uses for reclaimed plastic, like concrete and fuel, will offer an opportunity to absorb hundreds of thousands of tons, almost overnight.”
The technology of incorporating waste plastic into paving materials is likely to take a long time to evolve. While widely in use in India, it is still in its nascent stages in other countries. However, given that only 9 percent of the 350 million tons of plastic that humans produce each year is recycled, advocates see the technology as one of many strategies that can help humans quit the habit of blindly sending waste downstream and adopt the practices essential for a circular economy: reduce, reuse, recycle.
“The beauty of roads is that there are lots and lots of them,” said Greg White, a paving engineer at Australia’s University of the Sunshine Coast. Four companies have so far constructed hundreds of miles of plastic roads in Australia, “primarily smaller local roads,” he noted. “That’s mainly because the local councils are far more willing to try things that are viewed as sustainable, as opposed to government departments that oversee big highways.” Added White, who has studied products from the Scottish company MacRebur, a leading manufacturer of plastic paving materials, “For those properties we can test, there’s absolutely no doubt that if you put the right plastic in the asphalt, you can improve the properties of the surface.”
What’s missing, he and others caution, are data on how well plastic roads age and endure over time, since in most countries the technology has been in use for less than seven years.
While different companies are pursuing different approaches, the general idea is that waste plastic is melted and mixed with other ingredients for making road asphalt. Ordinarily, asphalt is composed of 90 to 95 percent aggregate—whether gravel, sand, or limestone—and 5 to 10 percent bitumen, the black gooey substance extracted from crude oil that binds the aggregate together. When contractors add waste plastics—which can serve as an even stronger binding agent than bitumen—they often replace just 4 to 10 percent of the bitumen, though some methods call for much more. Plastic roads, therefore, are not solid ribbons of plastic—far from it.
Research suggests that “using waste plastic in road construction helps to improve substantially the stability, strength, fatigue life, and other desirable properties of bituminous mixes, leading to improved longevity and pavement performance,” Michael Burrow, an engineer at the University of Birmingham and senior author of a global study of the technology, said in an email. “Albeit, it may be too early for many of the reported applications to show premature failure.”
According to Toby McCartney, cofounder and CEO of MacRebur, using waste plastics in road paving can absorb a significant volume of discarded plastic. “Of the waste plastics that are a problem for municipalities, we could use about 40 percent of it, if we got every road containing waste plastic,” said McCartney. “At the moment, we’re lobbying to try to get waste plastics included within the standards. Until that happens, it’s on a smaller scale than we would like it to be.” According to the company’s website, every ton of MacRebur mix contains the equivalent of 80,000 plastic bottles; every kilometer of road paved with its product contains the weight of nearly 750,000 plastic bags.
MacRebur’s plastic material is crumbed down to the size of rice grains, bagged, and sold to construction and asphalt companies globally. Since MacRebur’s launch in 2016, its materials have gone into hundreds of miles of roads, paths, driveways, and parking lots in Turkey, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere. In the U.S., the company is establishing a presence on both coasts, with a factory planned for Tampa, Florida, and manufacturing agreements in California.
Pursuing a different approach, PlasticRoad in the Netherlands avoids traditional asphalt altogether. In 2018, the company completed a 100-foot pilot project in Zwolle, billed as the world’s first recycled plastic bike path. A second one followed in Giethoorn. Cheap to produce and easy to install, these paths are built with hollow modules made of single-use discarded plastics. In Ghana, Nelplast mixes shredded plastic waste with sand and molds the mixture into pavement blocks.
In India, where 50 percent of the country’s roads were unpaved only a few years ago, as many as 14,000 miles of new roads have been installed since India’s Minister for Road Transport made it mandatory, in 2016, to add waste plastic into bituminous roads. India’s plastic road technology grew out of experimentation done in 2001 by R. Vasudevan, a chemistry professor at the Thiagarajar College of Engineering in Madurai.
Recognizing the similarities between plastic and bitumen, both derived from petroleum, he mixed shredded plastic with gravel, then bitumen, and saw a good bonding effect. Vasudevan’s method reportedly employs two types of plastic: LDPE, or low-density polyethylene used in plastic bags, and PET, polyethylene terephthalate, used in soda bottles. MacRebur’s McCartney recalls being in India in 2016 and noticing people repairing potholes by plugging them with plastic bags and lighting them on fire. It gave him the idea behind MacRebur.
How environmentally friendly are plastic roads? One concern is that heating plastic for making asphalt can create carbon emissions, thus negating any emissions savings from using less bitumen. Vasudevan says that for his own method, it’s only necessary to heat plastic to 170 degrees Celsius (338 degrees Fahrenheit), which is well within a safe range. “Plastics, as they’re heated, go from solid to liquid to gas, and it’s only above 270 degrees C, when they’re at their gassiest, that they release gases,” explained Troutman, who is also an environmental scientist. McCartney calculates that for every ton of bitumen left out of asphalt, as much as a ton in CO2 emissions is saved, since less petroleum is heated for bitumen’s extraction. The processing of petroleum-based asphalt is responsible for sizable greenhouse gas emissions each year.
Another concern about plastic roads is that they will shed microplastics. No one has yet reported that this has occurred, and those interviewed for this article say they don’t see microplastics as a problem. “Road material is relatively inert, a solid block of asphalt,” noted Troutman. “In fact, the largest source of microplastics on the planet is abrasion of tires.”
Last summer, a pilot project in California drove home just how much rigorous testing has to occur before a road, if paved with a novel material like plastic, is deemed drivable and safe, especially a major highway driven over by big rigs with heavy loads. Highway 162 in Oroville was in the headlines last August when Caltrans, the California Department of Transportation, working with TechniSoil Industrial, which supplied the liquified plastic, paved a 1,000-foot test strip. It was Caltrans’ first time using this new approach. “I hate plastic,” said Tom Pyle, who heads Caltrans’ Office of Asphalt Pavement Program. “I won’t even drink out of a plastic bottle—and if there’s a way of using waste plastic to make a road last longer, let’s do it.”
Their machines went out, ground up the top layer of old road, turned it to gravel, mixed in PET from recycled soda bottles—which has the consistency of “Gorilla Glue,” Pyle noted—and lay the mixture back down. No extra gravel or bitumen was used. Later, an engineer checking the job sent word that the new surface “moved” and felt unsafe. Caltrans ended up replacing it with traditional asphalt. “That was our first trial section for plastic,” said Pyle. “We didn’t want any accident for any reason to taint the goal of building a plastic road.”
Far from being deterred, Caltrans likely will install another test section in Oroville next spring. Pyle said that they will use new construction methods and aim for “higher strength.” “We don’t yet know how thick this material needs to be to carry thousands of trucks a day,” he said.
Troutman views plastic roads as “a promising advance,” especially in a country like Ghana with a backlog of road projects. And yet, with the looming prospect that by 2050 the world will produce over three times as much plastic waste as it ever has, she stresses the importance of Ghana’s curtailing all unnecessary use of new plastics. “That’s the first step,” she noted. “If we keep pumping out more and more plastic, we’ll never be able to manage it in a sustainable way.”
Australia has kangaroos, China has pandas, and Scotland is known for its… cows? Shaggy, ginger, pink-tongued, Highland cows to be exact.
They’re charming animals that you’ll see in fields and paddocks across the Hebrides and even along the Scottish Borders.
But if you’re not actually in the UK right now, the pandemic means you probably won’t be visiting these sweet, lumbering animals at least for a little while.
Not to worry, though. The team at Visit Scotland are helping out travelers who are stuck at home with a ‘coo cam’, so everyone can get their fix of Highland farm animal sweetness.
Check out Visit Scotland’s social feeds and you’ll see cows from Kitchen Coos and Ewes in Dumfries and Galloway, and from Edinburgh’s Swanston Farm.
The cows were filmed in November and clips will be released through the year.
“We want people to still be able to enjoy our country and what makes us unique through the virtual experiences you can still enjoy from the comfort of your own home,” says Visit Scotland tourism board, “From using a tree as a scratch post, making their moos heard, and having a good nosey at the camera, the Coo Cam provides an access all areas perspective to life on the farm.”
Take a mooment to chill & enjoy this beautiful scene this #Coosday!☀️🧡 📍 Kettlebridge, #Fife 🎥 IG/lynnslittlecorneroftheworld
Quote of the Day: “I am not a product of my circumstances. I am a product of my decisions.” – Stephen Covey
Photo by: Javier Allegue Barros
With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?
Sometimes when you meet someone for the first time, you feel an instant kinship. That was the case for two Connecticut coworkers who later learned their sisterhood wasn’t just figurative—it was literal.
Julia Tinetti and Cassandra Madison were both born in the Dominican Republic and later adopted. Each woman had a tattoo of that country’s flag. The pair bonded over the coincidences while customers at the New Haven bar where they both worked teased them about looking and acting so much alike they might as well be sisters.
With similar stories, Tinetti and Madison compared notes on their respective adoptions, but according to the paperwork, they weren’t related. While the news was disappointing, it didn’t impact the relationship. Even when Madison moved to Virginia Beach, the friends remained in close contact.
After relocating south, Madison found herself hankering to find out about her origins. Tinetti, knowing not every story has a fairy tale ending, decided not to disturb the status quo. “Finding my biological family just wasn’t a thing for me. I grew up with a great family, so I just kind of left it to what it was,” she told Good Morning America.
In 2018, Madison’s adoptive mom gifted her with a genetic testing kit for Christmas. From there, Madison was able to locate several distant family members as well as a cousin back in Connecticut who was able to hook her up with her birth family in the Dominican Republic.
Sadly, her biological mom had passed away in 2015, but Madison was thrilled to learn that her father and seven siblings were alive and well and eager to meet her.
In 2019, Madison flew down for a reunion. “We bonded immediately,” she told The Washington Post. “It was like I had known them my whole life.”
The next part of the story sounds like something taken directly from the script of a telenovela.
In December of 2020, Tinetti’s childhood friend Molly Sapadin, who was now a friend of Madison’s as well, made a discovery. It seems Sapadin was also adopted from the Dominican Republic—on the same day as Tinetti. When Sapadin saw the surname “Collado” on Madison’s Facebook posts from the visit she’d made with her biological family it rang a bell.
Sapadin’s adoption papers revealed that she and Madison shared the same birth mother—only they didn’t. The adoption agency had, as subsequent DNA tests proved, accidentally switched Sapadin’s birth record with Tinetti’s.
As it turned out, Tinetti was Madison’s sister—and Sapadin was their cousin. (DNA testing also revealed that Sapadin has a twin sibling she’s yet to connect the dots with.)
When Madison spoke with her biological father, Adriano Luna Collado, he confirmed a second daughter had been put up for adoption when the family was facing dire financial hardship due to illness.
“He [told me], ‘It was just a difficult time for your mom and I. So, I don’t like to talk about it. I don’t like to think about it,’” Madison recounted in her interview with GMA.
Now, both sisters are hoping for a reunion when COVID-19 travel restrictions are eased. In the meantime, they’re getting to know their biological family in the Dominican Republic via video chat.
Thanks to a crazy wrinkle in the cosmos, two devoted friends are now two devoted sisters. But Tinetti, for one, believes in destiny. “Now that I look back on it, this had to happen. We were meant to cross paths like this,” she told the Post, adding with a laugh, “I will forever be her annoying little sister.”
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With so many streaming services, 24-hour news programs, and podcasts available for online entertainment, one farmer is thanking her lucky stars that someone simply wanted to watch an Internet livestream of a pigsty.
‘Swine cam’ livestream/June Farms
At the moment that Lucy and Ethel—a pair of pregnant pot-bellied pigs—seemed destined to be turned into a roast by a fire in the barn, Laura Palladino, who had tuned-in to the livestream to see if they had given birth, was able to call 911 and alert the farmers of the impending disaster.
Palladino had visited Ethel and Lucy some weeks before at their sty on June Farms in New York state, and took a liking to the animals—so much so that after the farmer had installed a webcam the day before the incident, she decided she would check up her new friends.
CBS news reports that according to Palladino, she was (perhaps unsurprisingly) the sole viewer of the livestream—the only one in the world who knew it was happening.
“I logged on and at first, I thought it was just, like, a wood-burning stove in the background,” Palladino told WKBN. When she realized it was a fire, she jumped into action, despite being 60 miles away, in a different county.
“I just called 911, but I’m in Dutchess County, so the 911 sent me to Dutchess County 911. And the operator, he was like, ‘What? You’re watching a YouTube video?’” she said.
Nevertheless, the call eventually got out to Matt Baumgartner and farmhand Joshua Vics, who rushed to the scene and saved the animals’ bacon. Apparently, clumsy Ethel had knocked over a heat lamp, which lit the straw ablaze.
“My mind immediately went to the worst. My heart dropped into my stomach,” Vics said. “I don’t like to think about how bad it could have been if she (Palladino) didn’t say something.”
(Watch the local TV news coverage below.)
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When photographer Edas Wong takes photos around the streets of Hong Kong, he captures random elements intertwining in images that are joyful, charming, and often surreal.
A stranger passing a large tree, leafy tree—to the playful eyes of Edas—looks like a man with a full and wonderful afro.
Edas Wong
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Wong’s awesome mantra is: “Imagination is everything.”
Edas Wong
Check out the photo gallery of Ed’s work below. Then head to his Instagram for even more imagination. More fun.
Mr. Clooney has been looking a little different recently.
Edas Wong
You just know where that phone’s heading…
Edas Wong
What do you think he’s running from?
Edas Wong
One man’s trash is another woman’s (fashion) treasure?
Edas Wong
The past year sometimes has us feeling the same way…
Edas Wong
Oof! Now that’s gotta hurt.
Edas Wong
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