Solar powered alternative to kerosene lamps supplied by Charity Solar Aid |
The Royal College of Art are promoting their SustainRCA initiative providing education, research and consultancy for businesses. The Great Recovery challenges the current economic and environmental model of take, make, dispose manufacturing. They promote a shift towards more circular systems and believe good design thinking is pivotal to this transition. The Great Recovery is building new networks to explore the issues, investigate innovation gaps and incubate new partnerships.
&SHARE are a resource sharing enterprise that provides an insurance backed platform to encourage organisation to meet and share their resources, including workspace, equipment, skills or data. They also offer users the opportunity to choose to work with businesses and non-profit organisations in their local area. In a similar vein, restart provide training for individuals, groups and organisations on how to repair our electronic gadgets, helping to reduce the 23% of functioning equipment taken for disposal.
The combination of environmental and economic sustainability drivers being linked to positive social outcomes was a feature of many of the most interesting propositions as was the increased diversity of organisations represented.
Goldfinger Factory is an upcycling production and learning hub for London’s most deprived residents, selling desirable home furnishings and fit-outs for London’s trendsetting residents and businesses. Based at the bottom of the iconic Trellick Tower by Erno Goldfinger, they must have one of the most desirable factory locations in London! They provide free workshops for the local community in furniture up-cycling, DIY and interior design as well as accredited training, work skills experience and ultimately create new job opportunities.
Among the acres of PV on show, coming mainly from China,
were a number of smaller organisations offering renewable energy storage and
optomisation solutions. My favourite show
giveaway was a Cadbury’s Boost bar from SOLARiBOOST
(do you see what they did there?) a low cost device which uses a domestic hot
water cylinder to store electricity from PV panels as heat, removing the need
for a separate solar hot water systems.
Similarly, Maslow provides
modern, high performance battery storage of renewable energy used to power
direct current (DC), LED lighting systems and other DC equipment, without the
need for wasteful power supply adaptors.
It is great to see these storage technologies coming to market and
challenging the assumption that renewables will be unable to meet our future
energy needs due to their inherent, intermittent availability.The UK timber industry was well represented under the inspirational Grown in Britain banner and included a particularly good stand from English Woodland Timber Ltd who offer a wide range of shingles, timber cladding and other products made from locally grow timber, along with larger section sizes, seasoned in West Sussex and suitable for a wide range of specialist joinery applications. I would love to see the Grown in Britain idea developed into building projects that are Made in Britain, to create jobs, preserve value from construction locally and ultimately help rebalance our economy.
I was surprised and delighted to see Rentez-Vous a marketplace that allows individuals
to hire out their under-utilised designer clothing represented. It is interesting that they see value in
presenting their service to the EcoBuild audience and I hope that this trend
for diversification is encouraged and supported by favourable terms for
charities, non-profit organisations and start-ups in the future.
My most surprising product of the show was a high performance pet door from petwalk which
they claim offers great design, comfort, energy saving and protection for you
and your pets. My only reservation is
whether our two Dachshunds, Hyphen and Ditto are bright enough to work out how
a door works? At least it can be
programmed to open automatically when the door senses their identity chips!
Best visual aid was by Giraffe Innovation Ltd who produced
a statue of a person and scaled their hands, feet, stomach and mouth to
represent the impact of their carbon footprint and
then provide recommendations on how to Change Your Habit.
In summary, I would say that uncertainty over the Green Deal
has significantly reduced the number of refurbishment products on display and
that wind turbines have disappeared almost completely, to be replaced by an
explosion in PV and biofuel systems. The
Green Fringe and Resource Co-located event are both good initiatives which have
helped to make this show more interesting and relevant than it has been for
some time. I would love to see the
diversity displayed in the exhibition reflected in the wider conference
programme and would encourage the organisers to seek out the innovative and inspirational
work of the many smaller organisations who struggle to get their story’s told
in mainstream media.
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