It's not every day an Australian high school student from Australia gets to share a stage with Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed and the President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev – and walks away with a $US100,000 ($132,000) prize.
But for 15 year-old Toby Thorpe, this week's award ceremony in Abu Dhabi was merely the end of the beginning for a two-year plan to spur interest in renewable energy and energy savings among students and his local community south-west of Hobart.
World temperatures hit a new high
World temperatures hit a record high for the third year in a row in 2016, creeping closer to a ceiling set for global warming, US government agencies said on Wednesday.
"It's been a long time coming … now we can actually put our plan into action," Mr Thorpe said. "It's quite exciting." So far, about 20 students have helped design and install a pellet mill, bio digester, a bicycle-powered mobile cinema, and started work on a greenhouse made from 2500 recycled bottles.
The main venture, though, will now proceed with the funding from the Zayed Future Energy Prize. That venture will transform a decrepit former dental clinic at the school into a six-star energy rated training site on campus.
"It will be a research centre for students and an example for community members and other schools to learn what we're doing so they can take it back and do it themselves," Mr Thorpe said.
Those other schools may include fellow finalists for the Oceania category of the prize scooped by Huonville.
"[It's] a lighthouse school for the region," Geoff Williamson, the school's principal said. "We're already having conversations with Samoans and the Fijians – a lot of their projects are similar."
Facing the future: Toby Thorpe ventures out from Huonville High. Photo: Peter Hannam |
Toby Thorpe, shares the stage with Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi (left) and Nursultan Nazarbayev, President of Kazakhstan. Photo: Supplied |
- Wide Gulf between rhetoric and reality for fossil fuels and renewables
- Early Skirmishes Point To A War Over Renewable Energy Lasting Well Into 2017
- Dutch Electric Trains Become 100% Powered By Wind Energy
- Funding boost for renewable sector to prepare ACT for green future
- Solar panel researchers investigate powering trains by bypassing grid
- Energy firms urge EU to back offshore wind
- Portugal runs for four days straight on renewable energy alone
- Denmark broke world record for wind power in 2015
- Dutch government facing legal action over failure to reduce carbon emissions
- Lesotho to harness wind and water in huge green energy project
- BritNed power cable boosts hopes for European supergrid
- Cape Wind to become America's first offshore windfarm
- Sun, wind and wave-powered: Europe unites to build renewable energy 'supergrid'
- The charts that show just how hot it was in 2016
No comments:
Post a Comment