Could light from nature be an end to light pollution and the insane electric bills?

in stemng •  7 years ago 

There has been an increasing urge to reduce the effects of light pollution currently occurring in major cities. People complain of the artificially-lit portions of the town at night.

NASA in conjunction with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are the groups that created Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). The VIIRS is an imaging suite onboard the National Polar-orbiting Partnership or Suomi NPP weather satellite.

The VIIRS takes images during the day and night to have a better understanding of the weather as human's growth and impact on the earth. But recently the photos gotten by the VIIRS shows a somewhat brighter night with each passing year.

[Image courtesy of NASA/NOAA]Source: A flat map image of the entire earth land surface at night, taken over nine days (in April 2012) and 13 days (in Octobr 2012)

Take a look at this picture of Paris taken by night on April 8, 2015, by Astronauts onboard the International Space Station. You could see how illuminated the city was, little wonder they call Paris "The City of Light."

[NASA]Source: Paris night picture taken from space

France’s minister for energy, environment and sustainable development, Delphine Batho, was in the forefront to push the law that outlawed shop lightning between 1 am and 7 am from July 1st. 2013.

This regulation was in a bid to save energy (about two terawatts/hours) which is enough power for 750,000 homes and also to prevent light pollution.

But Glowee a new startup company founded by 27-year old Parisian Sandra Rey may be able to help with the help of her company's genetic engineering.

The company make lights through the use of bioluminescence.
Bioluminescence is the process through which living things through a biochemical reaction to produce sparkling light much the same way many marine animals such as algae, jellyfishes, squids, shrimps, produce light at night.

The companies plan to produce long-lasting softly glowing lights which is similar to natural night lights to find a way around the ban.




The Technology


The blue-green luminescence given off by the majority of the aquatic organisms is what the company plan on harnessing.

But instead of getting the bigger aquatic creature, it opted for the bioluminescent back for obvious reasons of size and workability.

The name of the bacteria of choice is Aliivibrio fischeri bacteria.


Gene Editing



The bacterial luminescence of Aliivibrio fischeri bacteria is best at keeping the squid safe from predators at the ocean floor. The chemical reaction that produces light happens all through the lifespan of the bacteria.

But controlling the bacteria will be too complication once it is extracted out of the sea due to the different condition, eg due to the change in the pressure, the temperature of its former home, etc. Another problem is light is not always produced by the bacteria. It creates this light "on demand" when its host wants to hide or hunt.

To solve these problems, they used DNA information gotten from the Aliivibrio fischeri to edit the genes of E.coli bacteria to make it glow. Most strains of e-coli are harmless 1



The Aliivibrio fischeri bacteria lives in bobtail squid's mantle in a symbiotic relationship where the bacteria provide light under the squid and makes a camouflage hiding the squid's silhouette from predators in exchange for sugar and amino acid solution on which the squid feeds the bacteria.


Replication the deep ocean condition of the natural home of this Aliivibrio fischeri bacteria was difficult. Instead, the startup opted to tracer the gene code of Aliivibrio fischeri bacteria gene sequence via synthetic biology to the common E-coli bacteria which can survive optimally here.
The bioluminescent bacteria is placed in a transparent container that has oxygen and a gel nutrient to serve as its food. As it nibbles away, it behaves the same way as in the wild by giving off light. This tiny pocket of light provides illumination.

The major challenge faced by the company is how to sustain the duration of the light it gives.

Their first attempt only yields some few seconds of illumination.

The development team had to alter the DNA of the bacteria to provide a more intense light.

Another challenge is the duration. The longest time the light could last currently is three days. That is the time it takes the bacteria to run out of the nutrients.

The lights can be developed into any shape from window lightning to other forms of street light, etc.

But to go more ahead on its development they need money.

So far Glowee – which has raised €1.7 million (£1.4m) from backers including the state-owned utility which operates France's electricity network – has created installations for luxury-goods conglomerate LVMH and management consultants BCG. Rey plans to create lights for French retailers, which since 2013 have been banned from lighting windows between 1 am, and 7 am. The Wired


If this technology is fully developed, it will replace 19% of electricity use with a resulting reduction in 5% pollution in greenhouse gas emission.

The attempt by this small startup is worthy of emulation/support as there is nature at work here with zero electricity as we know it.


References

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

This technololy will definitely reduce polution and greenhouse. Thank you for this information.

Good work bro its really an epic contribution to this platform. I like your post

You are most welcome. Keep steeming.

I love this post. Management has a role to play here.

Ok.

VERY NICE PICTURE.

I like the pictures too.

My Mr Technology....
Well done sir...
Wonderful post as usual.

Thanks

Wonderful Invention breaking out. If this become a full blown reality, it will be a great progression for a greener world.
Enlightening article@greenrun

Thanks a lot.

The longest time the light could last currently is three days

3 days before the E.coli run out of nutrients, but can't they just give them more nutrients? why is this a problem? Do they produce light 24/7 and die after 3 days because of nutrient depletion?

I'm guessing the light will come with everything intact. You just won't be going back to the labs after every three days to get some nutrient added.

So you need a tiny light ecosystem to renew all the nutrients and resources for the e.coli... that's a pretty neat idea, hard to do, but really cool, keep us updated on this, i would love to get some bioluminescent light for my home

From the sound of it the container probably needs to be pressurized to replicate the conditions of the deep sea or the critters die. If that's the case, opening the container to add food would depressurize it and kill the critters.

Another guess - they would have to be genetically programmed to provide light all the time. I think it might be even more complicated to make them 1st light sensitive then make the sensitivity produce light for the correct condition (when it's light or when it's dark).

This is a great technology in embryo. I believe that if this fully take effect,There will definitely be a reduction in the hazard generated from light.
The major constraint here is cost.

Once they could get it up and running, the sky is the limit to what could be achieved when nature meets technology. Thank you.

These pictures are beautiful and lovely... I truly love seeing this kinda things, thanks for feeding my eyes with these amazing beauties...thanks for sharing....

Thanks for seeing the beautiful pictures.

what a creativity!!

To solve these problems, they used DNA information gotten from the Aliivibrio fischeri to edit the genes of E.coli bacteria to make it glow. Most strains of e-coli are harmless

Very insightful... I did not know that until now. Thanks for sharing.

You are most welcome.

The companies plan to produce long-lasting softly glowing lights which is similar to natural night lights to find a way around the ban.

It's a little sad that they are starting that work for that reason...but if they will succeed in developing technology that will make our civilisation more enviromental friendly, I think I can forgive them for doing that with that lowly intention.

Science is always trying to find a way to help man solve lots of problems. I'm happy they've already made a massive inroad into solving this problem. Thanks for reading.

I agree with you @greenrun

cover.gif

Bioluminescent building materials :) Interesting if that would be possible.

It sounds good but scaling would be an issue for this startup. Let's see how things evolve.

Very cool concept. Only downside I can think of is if the alterations made to the E. coli to make it bioluminescent have unforeseen effects on its genome, unpredictable mutations that cause it to become pathogenic all over again.

I'm sure they have that all covered and tested of course. Perhaps if they are further rendered anaerobic and then the physical light bulbs or globes or whatever are made to be fully airtight just as an extra paranoid safety measure.

Also useful (and possibly contradicting my previous suggestion might be a way to inject fresh feedstock into the lightbulb to keep the bacteria going. Instead of rechargeable, they are now refeedable lol.