Posts Tagged ‘olympics’

2010 Olympic Medals Made From E-Waste

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goldmedal-webNot only are the medals for the 2010 Winter Olympic Games trippy, they are made from recycled circuit boards.

From Gizmodo:

The medals, designed by Canuck artists Corrine Hunt and Omer Arbel, are made from the gold, bronze and silver reclaimed from old electronics. They’re also laser-etched so no two medals are the same and feature an undulating design meant to invoke the landscape of Vancouver.

It seems the Vancouver games will satisfy both snowboarders and environmentalist

Related Content:
Discoblog: A Year After the Olympics, Beijing’s Air Quality Back at Square One
Discoblog: Scientists Say Usain Bolt’s Chest-Thumping Cost Him .14 Seconds
Discoblog: “Sweating Robot” Built to Test High-Tech Athletic Gear

Image: Vancouver2010.com

October 20th, 2009 Tags: , ,
by Brett Israel in Technology Attacks! | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

A Year After the Olympics, Beijing’s Air Quality Back at Square One

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BeijingLast summer, we speculated whether the air pollution in China—home to the tirelessly-publicized 2008 summer Olympics—could prove hazardous to the health of the Games’ athletes and spectators. Still, the nation managed to clean up its air that summer by closing factories and allowing cars to hit the roads only every other day.

Unfortunately, the trend was too good to last: The veil of smog suspended over Beijing is back just a year later, and the nation’s air quality is now rated “hazardous” by the embassy. Although the so-called “Green Olympics” might have raised public awareness about the pollution in China, its political effects have been paltry. AFP reports:

“It changed the public mentality and made people remember the clear days we had 20 years ago and wonder why can’t we have that again. That’s a big achievement,” said [China climate and energy campaigner Yang Ailun].

However, the fact that China had to basically shut down much of the city of 18 million to meet its Olympic clean-air promises, showed that little real progress has been made.

“The Beijing experience did not provide any examples of cost-effective policies that can actually deliver results. All the major measures taken by the city were expensive and not easily replicated elsewhere,” she said.

Beijing maintains some restrictions on how many cars can be on the road on any given day, for example—but with the addition of 1,500 cars daily, such a measure is a little like teaspooning water out of a sinking aircraft carrier.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Could Beijing’s Polluted Air Sicken Olympic Spectators?
Discoblog: The Air Over There: As the Olympics End, a Look Back at Air Quality
Discoblog: 1/3 of China’s Yellow River Not Even Fit for Industrial Use

Image: flickr / kevindooley

August 4th, 2009 Tags: , , ,
by Allison Bond in Pollution Solutions (& Disasters) | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

The Air Over There: As the Olympics End, a Look Back at Air Quality

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beijing.jpgThe Olympics have come and gone amid a flurry of panic over the air quality in Beijing. But now that the athletes are packed up and boarding planes, we have a consensus: The air wasn’t nearly as bad as everyone feared. We described last month how the Chinese government closed down factories near Beijing and only allowed cars on the road every other day. Months into the clean air diet and billions of dollars later, Beijing set a record of its own: It had eight straight days of “excellent” air, the longest stretch of good weather the city has seen in a decade.

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August 26th, 2008 Tags: ,
by Boonsri Dickinson in Pollution Solutions (& Disasters) | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >