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NIKE, NASA Just Do It, Partner on Waste

NIKE, NASA Just Do It, Partner on Waste

Earth's artificial satellites form a halo of s...
Earth's artificial satellites form a halo of space debris. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Those interested in participating in the program have until May 15

Last week NASA and NIKE kicked off “LAUNCH: Beyond Waste Challenge” to find 10 “game changing” innovations that could revamp current waste management systems. The immediate steps are to find new methods to minimize waste or alter it into new products. In the long term, the goal is to have these new waste processing systems aid space travel in the future.

Those interested in participating in the program have until May 15 to submit ideas for the elimination, transformation and mitigation of waste. LAUNCH is also seeking proposals for waste reduction education and financial strategies. This initiative welcomes any innovations that can help with waste diversion or zero-waste strategies that can benefit in households, communities, businesses or industry.

The fundamentals behind LAUNCH are growing concerns over the effects that the world’s increasing population coupled with diminishing resources call for a complete redesign and rethink of how societies approach waste. Current practices from the obvious, incineration and landfill disposal, to even other more sustainable processes like recycling and “upcycling,” (which use energy and do not always address consumerism and the accumulation of “stuff”) are untenable in the long run.

LAUNCH’s organizers, which also includes the U.S. State Department and USAID, hope these 10 new ideas can help with future space exploration through new green engineering practices, reduced mass, and lower power consumption. On Earth, landfilling and incineration has long been the easy out because there is (still but not for long) land mass and an atmosphere in which to dump unwanted materials. But in an inhospitable environment like outer space, reducing, repurposing, reusing waste becomes critical in order to “mitigate orbital debris.” Meanwhile earthlings would benefit from new waste management practices, efficiency and a healthier environment. Businesses, and this is where NIKE comes in, would score improvements from an even leaner and greener supply chain.

NIKE and NASA have been at this before with a similar program that announced 10 new energy innovations last fall.

Read more . . .

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via Triple Pundit

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