►
From YouTube: BioEnergy Roundtable - Bjorgvin Saeverson
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
Hello:
everyone,
my
name,
is
pure
quince,
Iverson
I
am
a
founder
and
CEO
of
the
collar
group
mayor.
Thank
you
for
the
invitation
grant
appreciate
being
here,
for
someone
was
a
bit
of
a
history.
I
appreciate
history.
It's
really
nice
to
be
here.
For
the
first
time,
I
have
a
bit
of
an
accent,
grew
up
in
Iceland
and
moved
about
16
years
ago
to
Minneapolis
and
traveled
the
country
all
over
the
place
learned
a
lot
of
strange
things.
A
When
I
came
in
first,
sixty
percent
of
our
drinking
water
polluted
for
five
years
later
was
seventy
percent.
Then
we
stopped
measuring
it.
You
know
why
are
we
doing
that?
You
know
I,
didn't
think
any
more
about
it
at
the
time,
but
figured
that
there
are
ways
to
do
better.
One
of
the
first
things
I
learned
coming
to
America
was
we
have
organization.
We
have
a
system,
there's
a
lot
of
police
here,
there's
also
religion,
there's
something
that
keeps
his
whole
country
together,
and
you
know
the
good
ethics
in
general.
A
So
man
we
have
system
coming
from
a
European
country.
That's
attack
technically
I
grew
up
on
the
American
plate
or
the
European
American
tech
20
plates
me.
You
realize
we
have
something
in
America
and
it's
a
system
organization.
We
can
get
stuff
done
if
you
want
to
and
I
think
that's
a
little
bit
about
what
I'm
going
to
present
today
and
I'm
being
in
Pittsburgh,
you
know
words:
we've
got
a
lot
of
ingredients
for
a
lot
of
what
the
world
was
built
on.
A
Maybe
this
is
a
good
place
to
start
a
new
economy,
and
let's
see
if
this
just
to
put
things
into
perspective,
you're
going
to
hear
a
couple
of
times
in
my
presentation.
The
word
restorative
restorative
is
really
the
net
positive
space
that
you
probably
have
been
hearing
more
and
more
about
and
to
put
that
into
perspective,
there's
a
kind
of
a
race
in
the
world
right
now,
20
that
sustainability.
A
If
I'm
running
a
business
that
one
of
my
business
to
be
at
zero
mayor
I,
don't
think
you
want
to
see
the
city
to
be
at
zero.
It
means
really
green
means
different
things
to
all
of
us.
That's
why
green
doesn't
make
sense.
That's
why
there's
green
washing?
There
is
confusion.
Sustainability
is
0.
There's
no
doubt
about
what
sustainability
is.
It's
not
good,
it's
not
bad.
It's
maintaining,
but
we
do
have
broken
social
systems.
A
A
This
we
just
did
for
the
city
of
Paris
a
few
weeks
ago,
and
this
is
a
typical
city
with
transporting
waste
out
of
the
city
to
landfills.
Water
is
sent
in
massive
pipes,
expensive
system
that
needs
to
be
operated
every
so
often
at
a
huge
cost
to
very
expensive
processing
facilities.
This
is
a
process,
not
technology,
very
expensive
process.
This
water
is
treated
with
chemicals,
some
of
that
chemical
will
linger
and
that's
our
potable
water.
A
Agriculture,
we
buy
most
of
our
food
from
a
faraway
source
billions
and
billions,
and
billions
of
dollars
leave
our
economy
every
year.
Buying
energy-
and
I
want
to
show
you,
then,
the
solution
that
we
promote
is
integrated
utility
systems
that
combine
all
of
these
systems
into
one.
So
this
is
integration,
so
we
have
energy
wastewater,
IT,
don't
forget
IT
there.
We
don't
have
economic
growth
without
IT
and
I'm
talking
about
thousand
times
faster
than
what
we
have
today.
A
So
we
integrate
this
into
our
facilities,
so
this
is
iOS
stands
for
integrated
utility
system.
This
is
system
takes
about
eight
acres
of
land,
so
this
is
built
for
urban
spaces,
and
so
its
individual
system
can
operate
as
an
island,
but
it's
not
designed
to
do
that.
It's
called
it's
designed
to
connect
with
the
world
and
when
we
have
a
regional
approach
like
we
have
here
in
Pittsburgh,
which
is
rather
unique,
then
these
systems
will
talk
to
each
other
and
affect
the
rest
of
the
region
in
a
very
positive
way.
A
Here's
a
schematic
design
of
a
single
system.
It
integrates
that
the
water
through
an
anaerobic
digestion,
the
district
level.
So
no
water
leaves
the
district.
We
even
rainwater.
We
can
take
the
storm
water
into
a
single
stream
with
with
any
other
water
at
the
district
level.
This
is
a
hundred
percent
closed-loop
system,
and
so
we
have
complete
water
resilience.
A
There
are
other.
The
energy
is
created
through
anaerobic
digestion,
massive
energy
creation
at
the
district
level
and
just
to
show
you
a
little
bit.
What
it
looks
like
from
the
outside
is
a
greenhouse,
so
the
utility
is
gone.
Our
image
of
what
a
utility
system
is
is
gone
if
the
city
of
the
future,
the
utility
system
I'm
talking
about
the
infrastructure,
is
designed,
so
you
don't
notice
it.
It's
like
the
referee
on
the
field
that
you
don't
know
this
their
pic.
We
have
a
perfect
game,
and
here
the
utility
is
actually
on
the
ground.
A
If
we
want
to,
if
you
aspire
to
build
something,
that's
more,
we
want
to
attract
talent
in
people
and
business
from
the
globe.
Maybe
I
will
show
you
a
30-story
building
with
an
iconic
building
that
the
city
would
be
famous
for
and
an
idea
of
the
output.
One
facility
like
this
creates
1
million
pounds
of
fish.
In
a
year,
4
million
heads
of
lettuce,
400,000
pounds
of
herbs
microalgae,
other
energy
issue
products
come
in
here,
so
this
is
a
perfect
opportunity
to
connect
with
universities,
the
school
districts.
A
A
That
is
not
just
meant
to
be
a
technological
system,
but
it's
also
meant
to
bring
the
highest
level
of
social
well-being
as
an
infrastructure
can
provide,
and
we
often
get
carried
away
with
what
infrastructure
is
supposed
to
do
it's
to
post,
to
support
a
flourishing
economy
and
flourishing
social
systems,
because
if
we
don't,
we
have
a
lousy
economy,
it's
just
paying
a
simple.
It's
one
tile.
A
Here
is
a
specific
example
of
a
project
with
it
earlier
this
year
in
Minneapolis.
This
is
the
actual
district.
It's
close
proximity
to
downtown
about
80
acres
of
land,
so
not
a
lot
of
land,
1
billion
dollar
development.
They
had
a
light
rail
coming
through
which
birth
the
idea
of
this
development.
The
way
we
came
to
it
was
they
had
planned
a
green
plan
and
they
knew
that
we
were
kind
of
what
to
say,
relentless.
We
we
don't
settle
for
average
or
second
best.
A
Minnesota's
are
not
very
good
at
leading
the
very
happy
at
being
number
for
everything.
So
there's
a
bit
of
a
challenge
there,
but
we
were
asked
to
critique
the
plan.
We
did
so
and
we
gave
them
a
report
which
didn't
just
say
what
they
had
done
wrong.
It
was
just
more
about
what
do
we
have
and
how
can
we
reach
a
higher
goal?
A
What's
the
top
of
our
vision,
can
you
actually
achieve
it
turned
out?
We
could
do
even
better
than
that
and
then
so
we
were
retained
and
to
develop
a
plan
for
the
city
of
Minneapolis
and
and
other
cities
out
there
in
the
watershed
management
as
well
to
bring
Minneapolis
to
restorative
level
over
time.
So
this
this
includes
the
regional
approach
and
resilience
a
little
diagram
here,
some
of
the
key
technologies
that
we
recommend
it
in
our
system.
So
this
is
again
the
greenhouse
that
you
see
with
the
utilities
on
the
ground.
A
The
feature
here
is
a
waste
collection
system.
That's
on
the
ground,
so
there
are
no
garbage
trucks
visible.
The
city
of
the
future
will
certainly
have
this.
This
is
important,
for
example,
in
the
coastal
cities
and
wherever
you
have
flood
issues,
pests
and
rodents
and
other
things
that
we
get
rid
of
well,
the
northern
states.
They
appreciate
the
snowmelt
systems,
I,
don't
think
we
have
a
huge
problem.
I
think
it's
like
iceland
here.
Let
us
lead
them
in
front.
A
Very
important
thing
to
some
people
think
I'm
crazy,
but
hydrogen.
If
we
don't
learn
about
hydrogen
and
get
on
top
of
it,
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
come
behind
other
people.
California,
of
course,
is
the
best
example
in
the
US,
but
certainly
Europe,
Japan
anywhere,
where
they
have
energy
issues.
But
this
is
coming.
The
first
hydrogen
must
produce
hydrogen
cars
coming
to
market
this
fall.
So
this
is
just
a
way
to
emissions-free
infrastructure.
A
May
I
teach
you
a
little
bit.
May
I?
Tease
you
a
little
bit
yeah
I
know
you
so
yeah
I
will
sewer
yeah
I
hear
that
couldn't
talk
yeah
we
are.
We
are
processing
water,
we're
going
to
turn
put
my
sewer
and
stormwater
into
very
pure
potable
water,
water,
pure
absolutely
chemical,
free.
This
water
with
a
renewable
energy
grid.
We're
going
to
use
our
renewable
energy
grid
to
convert
this.
What
we
turn
from
sewer
at
night
into
hydrogen
is
anybody
with
me
that
we
have
free
energy
in
the
morning?
A
Ok,
we
get
the
bus
operators
or
truck
companies
and
we
give
them
hydrogen
and
we
connect
you
with
them.
We
connect
them
with
cooperative
agreements
in
Europe
or
in
the
US
for
cheap
asses,
and
so
this
is
absolutely
doable.
We
can
start
with
three
passes
year,
16
year
to
10.
After
that
and
in
10
20
years
we
have
an
entire
fleet
emissions-free
on
free
energy,
little
teaser,
but
absolutely
doable
at
last.
A
Canada
conclusion
is:
we
are
tackling
environmental
system,
social
systems
and
our
economy
in
a
single
swipe,
and
when
we
have
an
alignment
and
it's
a
thought
through
process
which
we
all
participate
in,
we
have
some
sort
of
an
identity
that
comes
out
of
it.
Today
we
all
earn
the
city
has
an
identity,
but
we're
not
thinking
about
aligning
these.
A
So
when
we
seek
the
alignment
and
it's
a
process
that
we
go
through,
we're
going
to
have
a
really
strong
I
entity-
and
this
is
what
attracts
people
and
talent,
business
and
economy,
not
from
Cleveland
or
New
York
or
LA.
It's
going
to
come
from
hong
kong,
it's
going
to
come
from
France,
it's
going
to
come
from
anywhere
else
in
the
world
this.
If
it's
about
competitiveness
eventually-
and
you
have
to
see
my
name
to
believe
it
I
think,
but
thank
you
very
much
good
to
be
here.