Lighthouse Eco

Striving for a sustainable Lifestyle

Month: March 2021

Average westerner’s eating habits lead to loss of four trees every year

Destruction of forests is a major cause of both the climate crisis and plunging wildlife populations, as natural ecosystems are razed for farming.

Bluu Biosciences raises cash to become Europe’s first purveyor of lab-grown salmon, trout and carp

Bluu Biosciences has raised €7 million in a round of financing from investors including Manta Ray Ventures, Norrsken VC, Be8, CPT Capital and Lever VC to compete with a host of startups like BluNalu, Wild Type and Shiok Meats in a bid to market with a lab-grown fish replacement.

Japan Goes Rogue and Resumes Commercial Whaling

On July 1, the day after Japan officially withdrew from the International Whaling Commission, its fishing fleet slaughtered two minke whales off the island nation’s northern coast. This is the first time Japan has hunted whales commercially since the IWC declared a moratorium on the practice 31 years ago.

Extreme E starts this weekend in AlUla, Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia is set to host Extreme E’s first ever race, the Desert X Prix, on April 3 and 4 at the breathtaking destination of AlUla. Organisers today revealed the reasons behind their choice to launch the first ever season…

Africa’s Elephants Are Two Different Species, and Both Are Endangered

Africa’s elephants are in trouble, and human activity is to blame.

Sir David Attenborough Backs New Tech That Can Recycle All Plastics

Wildlife filmmaker Sir David Attenborough has appeared in a video campaign for a new plastic recycling technology in the U.K., alongside other naturalists calling for stronger protections for the world’s oceans. The campaign heralds the start of construction in the…

UK Government launches £20m competition to boost innovation in zero-carbon ship building

The UK government has launched a competition with a £20m prize fund to encourage innovation in the shipping industry to cut harmful greenhouse gas emissions which are currently on the rise. The Department for Transport’s scheme aims to foster innovations for a greener shipping future, including zero-emission vessels and clean…

How much plastic are you eating?

What’s for dinner? Lego sushi, credit card burgers, or a well-done piece of PVC pipe? These examples may sound extreme, but can easily represent over time the cumulative amount of microscopic pieces of plastic we consume every day.

Feeding cows a few ounces of seaweed daily could sharply reduce their contribution to climate change

Methane is a short-lived but powerful greenhouse gas and the second-largest contributor to climate change after carbon dioxide. And the majority of human-induced methane emissions comes from livestock. About 70% of agricultural methane comes from enteric fermentation – chemical reactions in the stomachs of…

Climate change: Jet fuel from waste ‘dramatically lowers’ emissions

A new approach to making jet fuel from food waste has the potential to massively reduce carbon emissions from flying, scientists say. Currently, most of the food scraps that are used for energy around the world are converted into methane…

Top-secret Cold War project found disturbing ‘life-like’ fossil plants under Greenland

Frozen soil held plant fragments that may be a million years old. Frozen soil that was collected in Greenland during the Cold War by a secret military operation hid another secret: buried fossils that could be a million years old. Recent analysis…

How Dirt Could Help Save the Planet

Farming practices that retain carbon in the soil, or return it there, would limit both erosion and climate change