Monday, 16 March 2015

DO WE ALL GET 1,440 MINUTES A DAY?


How do you spend your 1,440 minutes a day? Time is precious and how and what you spend it on is so vital. Are you using your time wisely? Do you spend it thinking of what difference you will make to your world and generation or are you part of those depriving  this world and this generation by not doing what you ought to do?

Wow!!! Have a look at the story I have for you today. It is amazing how people use their God given brains!!!  I can assure you that this innovation that is going to save the economy a lot of money in the future could not have been, had someone, somewhere not thought it wise to use their time for a best course.

Where are you now on the project you are working on, or you have not started anything yet but have the nudge that you need to do something, or you are there allowing  procrastination steal your time away?

Come on now!!! Time waits for no man, spend your time wisely for the right cause, the reward is enormous.

This news beats my imagination. Read with me and do what it takes on time to be next on the news headlines because of your innovation or the change you have brought to humanity.




 
It’s here: Britain’s first bus that runs entirely on poo

Oliver Wheaton for Metro.co.ukSunday 15 Mar 2015 8:39 pm
 


Green inside and out (Picture: Ben Birchall/PA Wire)
No one likes a dirty, smelly bus – but this one actually reeks for a good reason.
Britain’s first ‘poo bus’, which runs on human and household waste, goes into regular service later this month (and no, it won’t smell like poo).
Powered by biomethane gas, the Bio-Bus will use waste from more than 32,000 households along its 15-mile route.
Operated by bus company First West of England, the bus will fill up at a site in Avonmouth, Bristol, where sewage and inedible food waste is turned into biomethane gas.
The bus, which can seat up to 40 people, was unveiled in the Bristol area last autumn. Transport company First is showing off the bus in Bristol on Tuesday and it will operate four days a week on Service 2, which stretches from Cribbs Causeway to Stockwood, from March 25.
If the route proves a success, First will consider introducing more ‘poo buses’.
 
First West of England managing director James Freeman said: ‘Since its original unveiling last year the Bio-Bus has generated worldwide attention and so it’s our great privilege to bring it to the city, to operate – quite rightly – on Service 2.
‘The Bio-Bus previously made an appearance running between Bath and Bristol Airport at the end of last year, but it’s only actually been used once before in the centre of Bristol itself.’
He added that seeing the bus running in a city ‘should help to open up a serious debate about how buses are best fuelled, and what is good for the environment’.



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