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Solar-powered 'smart' roads could zap snow, ice

Evil Eye

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(CNN) -- The mayors of New York and Atlanta, Georgia, suffered stinging criticism for their handling of recent winter storms, but in the near future, technology could clear city streets of ice and snow -- by simply melting it away.



America's harsh winters cost the nation's economy billions of dollars each year in snow removal equipment, weather damage to streets and vehicles, extra days of school and revenue lost to closed businesses.



Scott Brusaw, a 53-year-old electrical engineer in tiny Sagle, Idaho, thinks he has a solution. So far, he's generated interest from the federal government and General Electric in his idea for a solar-powered roadway made from super-strong glass, instead of conventional asphalt or concrete.



I'm looking out the window now at about a foot of snow, so if we can make it work here, we can make it work anywhere in the country, Brusaw said. I'm hoping this spring we'll start laying the foundation for it right outside our building here.

Bloomberg on snow: Not business as usual

Critics: Frozen city preps come up short

Cars and pedestrians fight icy roads



Solar cells inside its glass surface would allow the roadway to act as a giant solar power generator, fueling embedded heating elements and making plows and other snow removal equipment unnecessary.

Rest: http://edition.cnn.com/2011/TECH/innovation/01/19/smart.roads/index.html
 
-- How much would the solar highway cost? Brusaw calculates an estimated cost -- in great detail -- on his website. Short answer: each mile would cost $4.4 million.



4.4 million per mile? This is never going to happen.
 
Jazzy said:
4.4 million per mile? This is never going to happen.
Depends really, if it stays intact long enough it'll end up cheaper.

Does seem a bit pricey though.
 
Eventually that technology will become cheaper. There have to be easier solutions though.
 
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