{"id":36085,"date":"2024-03-08T12:48:00","date_gmt":"2024-03-08T17:48:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.21stcentech.com\/?p=36085"},"modified":"2024-03-08T13:34:19","modified_gmt":"2024-03-08T18:34:19","slug":"kinetic-energy-harvested-human-activity-save-planet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.21stcentech.com\/kinetic-energy-harvested-human-activity-save-planet\/","title":{"rendered":"Can Kinetic Energy Harvested From Human Activity Help Save The Planet?"},"content":{"rendered":"
A green energy pilot project<\/a> at the Miromesnil Metro Station in Paris, France has involved the installation of six turnstiles that serve as miniature turbines capturing the kinetic energy produced by people as they pass through them. The technology being used here comes from Bilbao, Spain-based Iberdrola<\/a>, a multinational electricity utility company.<\/p>\n Wind and hydroelectric power are two examples of commonly used kinetic energy sources. What else is there? Gravity<\/a> combined with large drops can be a kinetic energy source. Back in February 2023, I wrote about using the vertical drop found in abandoned mine shafts where large payloads of material like sand or gravel could be dropped to power turbines and generators.<\/p>\n Another kinetic energy source that we can harvest comes from our feet on sidewalks and floors and from cars and trucks we drive on roads.<\/p>\n Speaking of feet, our shoes can become portable power generators with piezoelectric devices in the soles and heels producing enough electricity to power mobile devices.<\/p>\n As cars and trucks drive over roadways embedded with piezoelectric harvesters, the conversion of small amounts of mechanical surface force can be turned into electricity.<\/p>\n The floors in our homes and workplaces can become kinetic energy harvesters.<\/p>\n Imagine a crowd going into a sporting event and as they walk to and through the stadium, they generate enough force to power the stadium lights, or electricity that can be put into battery storage for later use.<\/p>\n So why aren’t we harvesting the kinetic energy we produce from daily activities?<\/p>\n The Paris Metro station pilot project is worth noting. Turning a turnstile into a power source is a neat idea. At the Miromesnil station, 27,000 people pass through those turnstiles every day. Iberdrola has estimated that if all the Paris Metro stations were to convert to turnstile turbines the subway would generate 136 Megawatts annually, almost enough energy to power the entire Metro system and equivalent to removing 30,000 tons of CO2 from the atmosphere annually.<\/p>\n The retrofit of the Paris Metro, however, is not happening because the powers that be have concluded that the cost of converting the entire system to turnstile turbines would be too expensive. Iberdrola, however, believes that the technology has a future and is looking to other cities to deploy turnstile turbines.<\/p>\n In 2012, Innowattech, an Israeli company, proposed putting piezoelectric harvesters in roadways<\/a> noting that one kilometre (0.62 miles) would produce 400 Kilowatts of power, enough to light and heat over 160 homes.<\/p>\n