World Wide Jigsaw
I think that people can solve all of our problems, if we could
just work together. In fact, I think that solutions of many of
our problems already exist in pieces scattered here and there
all over the world. For example, all over the planet the Sun is
shining on thousands of miles of roads and highways, and this
energy is wasted, doing nothing useful for humanity or the
Earth. Somewhere on one of those roads there might be a company
or a person with a way of producing a translucent substance,
both cheap enough and tough enough to be used to surface roads.
Some other company on a different street has a way of making
cheap solar cells, but they are not tough enough to surface
roads with. Obviously, if we combine the two products we could
make all the thousands of miles of highway all across America
into a network of solar cells, replacing a bunch of polluting
power plants.
One problem with this idea, among many, is that the people with
the translucent substance and the people with the cheap solar
cells probably don't live on the same street. They are unlikely
to even be in the same country. Luckily, the Internet is
connecting people. Some day soon a creative teenage girl doing a
school project in Louisiana might do web searches on 'plastics',
'highway construction costs', and 'experimental solar panels'
and discover that: - The median cost of constructing a lane mile
of highway in America is $1,600,000, and in Louisiana it is
$2,015,000. (Source: Washington State Department of
Transportation, Highway Construction Cost Comparison Survey,
April 2002 Final report). - STMicroelectronics, a French-Italian
semiconductor maker, is making solar cells using organic
materials such as plastics. Cheaper than traditional solar
cells, these produce electricity for half the cost of burning
fossil fuels with no pollution.
With this knowledge, and knowledge of a clear substance that
would work as a road surface, she could work out how to
revolutionise both the roads and power grid of Louisiana,
reducing the cost of electricity while creating less pollution.
She could easily turn her school project into a proposal then
search the Internet for whom to send her proposal too.
Eventually these new roads might spread across America, and
across the whole world.
The world could be changed, not by a million dollar government
research project or a massive conference of important people.
Just by a single teenager with the initiative to put the answer
together, and the Internet to link her to the people with the
pieces.