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Million-dollar contest launched to help clean up oil spill

Thursday, 29 July 2010 10:45 Written by Green Man

by Agence France-Presse.

WASHINGTON—A foundation that helped launch private spaceflight on Thursday turned its gaze and pocketbook toward Earth, unveiling a $1.4 million contest to find new ways to clean up oil spills.

The year-long Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X Challenge kicks off Sunday.  It’s named for the wife of Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who put up the $1.4 million purse, and the X Prize Foundation, which is organizing the competition.

Frustrated at watching “the messy, uncoordinated” attempts to mop up oil from the massive BP leak in the Gulf of Mexico using outdated technology, the contest aims to inspire new ways to clean up future spills, Schmidt said.

“With nearly 4,000 active drilling platforms in the Gulf alone, and more than 10,000 oil platforms across the globe and millions of barrels of oil being transported every day by tankers, it’s not a question of ‘if’ there is another spill but ‘when,’” she said.

She argued that “we need to come up with better ways to respond quickly and to minimize the harm we are causing to marine life, coastal wetlands and beaches, and to our livelihoods.”   Teams will submit a blueprint for spill-fighting technology online on the website of the X Prize Foundation.

The foundation has run other “incentive competitions” with multi-million-dollar purses, including one in 2004 that saw Burt Rutan build and fly a private vehicle into space.

A panel of experts will evaluate the entries for feasibility, cost, efficiency, eco-friendliness, and how well they lend themselves to large-scale deployment, among other criteria, and the field will be whittled down by mid-2011 to a few teams of finalists.

Those teams will put their inventions to the test in a head-to-head competition at the National Oil Spill Response Research and Renewable Energy Test Facility in New Jersey. The teams will have to clean up oil-tainted water, and the winners will get at least $1 million. Runners-up and third-place teams will earn $300,000 and $100,000 respectively.

X Prize Foundation Chair Peter Diamandis expects hundreds of entries to the competition, which aims to “spur small teams with big ideas to solve big challenges.”

Other X Prize competitions currently under way include one to land a robot on the moon, one to build a safe, affordable car that gets at least 100 miles per gallon, and one to sequence 100 human genomes in 10 days.

[Editor’s note: Wendy Schmidt is a member of Grist’s board of directors.]

Related Links:

Breaking the wall of climate opposition

The Gulf’s invisible villain: natural gas

Congress rolls out its spill bills




by Agence France-Presse.

WASHINGTON—A foundation that helped launch private spaceflight on Thursday turned its gaze and pocketbook toward Earth, unveiling a $1.4 million contest to find new ways to clean up oil spills.

The year-long Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X Challenge kicks off Sunday.  It’s named for the wife of Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who put up the $1.4 million purse, and the X Prize Foundation, which is organizing the competition.

Frustrated at watching “the messy, uncoordinated” attempts to mop up oil from the massive BP leak in the Gulf of Mexico using outdated technology, the contest aims to inspire new ways to clean up future spills, Schmidt said.

“With nearly 4,000 active drilling platforms in the Gulf alone, and more than 10,000 oil platforms across the globe and millions of barrels of oil being transported every day by tankers, it’s not a question of ‘if’ there is another spill but ‘when,’” she said.

She argued that “we need to come up with better ways to respond quickly and to minimize the harm we are causing to marine life, coastal wetlands and beaches, and to our livelihoods.”   Teams will submit a blueprint for spill-fighting technology online on the website of the X Prize Foundation.

The foundation has run other “incentive competitions” with multi-million-dollar purses, including one in 2004 that saw Burt Rutan build and fly a private vehicle into space.

A panel of experts will evaluate the entries for feasibility, cost, efficiency, eco-friendliness, and how well they lend themselves to large-scale deployment, among other criteria, and the field will be whittled down by mid-2011 to a few teams of finalists.

Those teams will put their inventions to the test in a head-to-head competition at the National Oil Spill Response Research and Renewable Energy Test Facility in New Jersey. The teams will have to clean up oil-tainted water, and the winners will get at least $1 million. Runners-up and third-place teams will earn $300,000 and $100,000 respectively.

X Prize Foundation Chair Peter Diamandis expects hundreds of entries to the competition, which aims to “spur small teams with big ideas to solve big challenges.”

Other X Prize competitions currently under way include one to land a robot on the moon, one to build a safe, affordable car that gets at least 100 miles per gallon, and one to sequence 100 human genomes in 10 days.

[Editor’s note: Wendy Schmidt is a member of Grist’s board of directors.]

Related Links:

Breaking the wall of climate opposition

The Gulf’s invisible villain: natural gas

Congress rolls out its spill bills




Posted: 2010-07-29 15:45:51

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