Category Archives: Environment

Natural teeth whitener removes bathtub stains, spares reefs

My dental hygienist kindly offered me this tip at my last cleaning: to keep teeth whiter between visits, brush once a month with a mixture of baking soda (tsp) and hydrogen peroxide (1 cap full). These compounds when mixed together remove coffee and tea stains from teeth naturally. Turns out baking soda comes from a mixture of calcium carbonate (shells or limestone) and sodium chloride (good ‘ole table salt). So I’ve been following her advice, and it works. My teeth are whiter for pennies. (Disclaimer: this is not medical advice.)

Happy with my whiter teeth, I wanted to take a nice hot bath after a long day of moving into a new house, but the bathtub was severely stained. It looked like about five years of thick yellowish soap scum. Gross. When I leaned in close to see how bad it was, I noticed some scratch marks on the fiberglass surround from where previous tenants had scrubbed ineffectively, possibly with a Brillo pad, and gave up. I wondered if the baking soda hydrogen peroxide mix would clean these stains, like it had cleaned my teeth.

With nothing to lose but yucky scum, I mixed up a bowl full of the mix and spread it on thick. After letting the mix stand and work for half an hour, I came back with a regular kitchen sponge to investigate the results. It took a little elbow scrubbing power, particularly in the corners, but all those gross stains came off. The tub surround was about 10 shades lighter, even better than the results on my teeth.

Best part is that I didn’t wash any toxic chemicals down the drain. Here in Hawaii, a lot of what goes down the drain eventually finds its way to the ocean and kills fish. Even though I wanted a hot bath in a clean tub, I didn’t want to kill a living reef to do it. A bonus suprise was that my hands and nails were fine afterward, no rashes or burns like with standard store cleaners.

Rainy Season Kicks Off in Hawaii

It’s that time of year again. I’m not talking about returning holiday gifts or scooping up retail bargains. It’s rainy season in Hawaii.

Like most Decembers, 2008 did not disappoint. While everyone on the Mainland wonders if they’ll have a white Christmas, here in Hawaii residents wonder if they’ll have power. Recent deluges have flooded our roads and yards, leaving many–like a million people on the island of Oahu–without power for several days. Blackouts in December signal that our wet season has arrived.

(My street turns into a river this time of year. )

It’s also the time of year when I gloat. While Barack Obama rushed out the buy a generator, I remained comfortably plugged into my off-the-grid solar power system. Didn’t have to get my slippers wet or stand in long lines. Never mind that I can’t use a hair dryer or hot plate because of my system’s limitations. The fact that I don’t pay a power bill–ever–far outweighs such minor inconveniences.

Obama may be our president-elect, but he and others in line with him at the Mart can still learn a thing or two about sustainable living–like how not to be dragged into the mud by their reliance on unsustainable energy. This isn’t rocket science, Obama, just one decision: use alternatives to fossil fuels.

Coming Soon to Hawaii: Electric Car Battery Swapping Stations

Hawaii is about to become the second state where it will be possible to pull into a special stations catering to drivers of electric cars, according to an article published on December 3, 2008, by CNET . Governor Lingle decided recently that Hawaii will partner with the company Better Place to provide the service stations.

Swapping stations for electric car batteries are similar to gas stations, except instead of filling up the tank with petrol, drivers with electric vehicles will be able to pull into an automated system that swaps out exhausted lithium ion car batteries for fully-charged ones. The stations will also offer drivers the ability to recharge the exhausted batteries with excess electricity generated from renewable sources during off-peak electricity hours.

(Illustration by David Simonds; courtesy of the Economist)

Hawaii is the second state in the U.S., and the fifth place in the world, to adopt the Better Place electric-car infrastructure. Better Place stations have already been implemented in Denmark and Israel, with Australia and California recently announcing intentions to add them. According to the governor’s plan, Better Place will pull permits for its stations in 2009, offer electric cars within 18 months, and make both available for the mass-market in Hawaii by 2012.

Critics of battery swaps argue that it is a time-honored  approach, but not necessarily the best one.  A recent article in the Economist magazine suggests that vehicles using lithium ion batteries, including hybrids, may be only transitional because a better technology is coming along in the form of the fuel cell.

According to greentech consultant Julian Sweet of San Francisco, California, there are other technologies coming along that could be more practical and just as promising as fuel cells. These include  fast charge, no overheating lithium chemistries likely available in the next year or two and super capacitors with instant charge in about 5 years.

Sweet says that lithium ion battery swapping is the best solution today, but it’s an expensive one to roll out, requiring byzantine logistical considerations that may become a victim of its success. The more widely the technology is adopted, the more tied car manufacturers become to it. The combustion engine is a classic example of how difficult it is for manufacturers to escape a hugely successful but increasingly outdated 100-year-old technology.

It remains to be seen how manufacturers will standardize the battery packs for different cars and how they will deal with new, more efficient battery technology — even if it works against this swapping model.

One solution is to rethink how society uses cars in general, suggest Sweet. A zip-car type of electric car business model would mean that individuals don’t own cars, but instead have access to a pool of cars in a pay-as-you-go fleet. Each parking space of public meter would have inductive loop charging so the cars are always topped up and ready to drive.

This business model would allow fleets to introduce the best cars as needed, and high utilization rates would keep the incentive to replace aging or outdated vehicles frequently. It would also add a common infrastructure that would make it easy to adopt national standards.  This vehicle charging infrastructure would resemble street lights now: they would be on every block. You would be charged only for speed or the amount of energy consumed and would receive a credit when not using the car.

With most islanders commuting less than 100 miles per day on a relatively small network of roads, this more forward-looking business model for cars could go a lot further toward eliminating car pollution and improving the efficiency of vehicles.