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Article Title: Bamboo to the Rescue
Author: David Sands
Category: Environment, Nature, Home
Word Count: 777
Keywords: bamboo, bamboo home, bamboo homes, green home, green homes
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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A growing world population of 6.3 billion needs the materials of life: food, 
clean water, shelter, clothes, and transportation. What can humans do to 
co-create a healthy planet? How do we restore and maintain balance between 
ourselves and our Earth?

Its become clear to many Americans that bamboo is one of the most significant 
solutions to our planetary issues. Because of its amazing properties, it can be 
used to greatly improve our level of sustainability. The rest of the world has 
been using bamboo since the dawn of civilization. In fact, over one billion 
people on Earth currently live in a bamboo (green) home.

Bamboo is the fastest growing plant on Earth. It grows one third faster than 
the fastest growing tree. Some species grow as much as four feet a day. Thanks 
to its rapid growth, the yield is up to 25 times higher than that of timber. It 
can be used to produce flooring, wall paneling, pulp for paper, fencing, 
briquettes for fuel, raw material for housing and more. 

Bamboo also serves as a natural control barrier. Because of its wide spread 
root system and large canopy it greatly reduces rain run-off, prevents massive 
soil erosion and increases watershed levels. Bamboo also helps mitigate water 
pollution due to its high nitrogen consumption, making it the perfect solution 
for excess nutrient uptake of waste water from manufacturing, intensive 
livestock farming, and sewage treatment facilities.

One of greatest attributes of bamboo is that it can be harvested and 
replenished with virtually no impact to the environment. Every year it can be 
selectively harvested and is capable of regenerating without needing to be 
replanted, making it a viable replacement for wood. Bamboo is also one of the 
strongest building materials on the planet, having twice the compression 
strength of concrete and roughly the same strength-to-weight ratio of steel. It 
withstands up to 52,000 pounds of pressure psi. 

With a 10-30% annual increase in biomass versus 2-5% for trees, bamboo creates 
greater yields of raw material for use. One clump can produce 200 poles in the 
five years it takes one tree to reach maturity. In Costa Rica, 1000 homes are 
built every year with all of the building material coming from the same 150 
acre plantation.

Bamboo plantations and farms are quickly becoming the perfect global warming 
adversaries. Each acre isolates up to 40 tons of co2. It eats carbon dioxide! 
The bamboo plant takes co2 from the atmosphere and turns it into sugars, 
through the process of photosynthesis, then transforms these sugars into the 
compounds that make up its fiber. The co2 from the atmosphere is thus locked up 
in the plant fiber itself. The bamboo fiber is then used to construct green 
homes and buildings, leaving the carbon within it sequestered for the entire 
100-year lifetime of the building. A 1,000 sq. ft. green home has over 15 tons 
of carbon dioxide locked up (sequestered) within its fibers. 

To absorb the entire 30 billion ton carbon dioxide output of humankind, without 
emission reductions, would require an area roughly five times the size of Texas 
to be planted in bamboo. To sequester the entire carbon dioxide output of the 
United States would require a planted area of 174 million acres, approximately 
the size of Texas.  Each and every green home we build contributes in our 
mission to help reverse global warming and restore balance on Earth.

Bamboo green homes are made with a special timber species. The poles used in 
the houses are three and a half inches in diameter and the wall of the pole is 
three quarters of an inch in thickness. The hollow tube shape gives a strength 
factor of 1.9 times more than an equivalent solid wood beam. How strong is that 
exactly? The exceptionally strapping and flexible poles are able to withstand 
the extreme forces imposed on a house during hurricanes and earthquakes.

Some of the bamboo homes withstood 3 hurricanes with winds at 173 m.p.h. in the 
Cook Islands in Polynesia in 2005. Meanwhile, most of the wood frame houses on 
the island were damaged beyond repair. All of the twenty bamboo houses built 
for the National Bamboo Foundation survived a 7.5 Richter scale earthquake in 
Costa Rica in April 1991. An earthquake in Colombia in January 1999 also 
destroyed 75 percent of the buildings in the region, however, the bamboo 
structures survived uniformly unscathed.

Do you believe bamboo can do all of that? Serve as the worlds most renewable 
resource and building material, restore native habitat, prevent erosion, 
protect watersheds, help to reduce global warming, and protect us from 
earthquakes and hurricanes. What else does our growing planet need help with? 
Bamboo is to the rescue.

David Sands is a renowned green building architect and bamboo advocate. You can 
learn more about bamboo and green homes by visiting http://www.bambooliving.com
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