Future Battery-metals Plant, and Underwater Robots Designed by Bjarke Ingels for The Metals Company

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • Architect BIG has designed a factory and a number of waterborne craft for The Metals Company, which aims to reduce the environmental impact of battery production by extracting metals from the seafloor.
    The proposed designs will facilitate an alternative to land-based mining of nickel, cobalt, copper and manganese.
    These metals are essential for batteries such as those used in electric vehicles, but their mining can have a devastating impact on humans and the environment.
    The Metals Company is developing a process to instead extract the necessary metals from fist-sized rocks that lie loose on the seafloor, which it claims will have a much lower impact than traditional mining.
    Architecture firm Bjarke Ingels Group's designs for the company include a metals processing and recycling plant, carbon-neutral water vessels and underwater robots to collect minerals.
    "The global energy system needs to undergo its most profound change in centuries to realise a world run exclusively on renewable sources," said BIG founder Bjarke Ingels.
    "If the ongoing research and studies conclude that harvesting minerals from the seabed can be done in an environmentally and socially responsible way, we will not only be able to accelerate the green transition but give form to an entirely new industry that will create a sustainable circular metals economy for future generations."

Комментарии • 7

  • @asnierkishcowboy
    @asnierkishcowboy 3 года назад +6

    Especially Litthium is "mined" in very dry, rocky desert like regions. The eco impact in mining it is pretty. Low. And now you guys suggest sending vacum-cleaner robots on the bottom of the ocean?? I doubt that this better for the planet as theres lots of animals and microorganisms living even in the deep sea.

  • @yenestube-3972
    @yenestube-3972 2 года назад

    nice

  • @ObamabinLaden2283
    @ObamabinLaden2283 3 года назад

    First view first like first comment 😃

  • @jonathanedwardgibson
    @jonathanedwardgibson 3 года назад +3

    Have you seen the studies of the drastic reduction of insect numbers over the last century? When I was young you couldn’t drive w/o windshield wipers on during sunny summer days. I doubt scraping the ocean floor is going to assist Mother Nature recover and is absolutely going to reduce biomass. This channel is becoming tiresome in it’s application of imagination over ‘common-sense’ reality.

  • @stevieg6418
    @stevieg6418 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful concept. I hope it gets built.