About Janine Benyus: Janine M. Benyus is an American natural sciences writer, innovation consultant, and author.
For businesses, biomimicry is about bringing a new discipline - biology - to the design table. It's not to write an environmental impact statement, as most biologists in business do right now.
Hospital-acquired infections are now killing more people every year in the United States than die from AIDS or cancer or car accidents combined - about 100,000.
Biomimicry is basically taking a design challenge and then finding an ecosystem that's already solved that challenge, and literally trying to emulate what you learn.
The truth is, natural organisms have managed to do everything we want to do without guzzling fossil fuels, polluting the planet or mortgaging the future.
Biological knowledge is doubling every five years.
Nature works with five polymers. Only five polymers. In the natural world, life builds from the bottom up, and it builds in resilience and multiple uses.
Life solves its problems with well-adapted designs, life-friendly chemistry and smart material and energy use.
Life doesn't use detergent to clean itself.
Life creates conditions conducive to life.
Green chemistry is replacing our industrial chemistry with nature's recipe book. It's not easy, because life uses only a subset of the elements in the periodic table. And we use all of them, even the toxic ones.
Per capita, I would say that Australia has more biomimetic projects going than many other countries I've been to.
There are literally as many ideas as there are organisms.
Conserving habitats is a wellspring for the next industrial revolution.
Glue actually contaminates recyclables. We throw things in a landfill just because they're glued together.
Everyone is trying to jump on the biomimic bandwagon. But a cork floor is not biomimicry. Neither is using bacteria to clean water.
We're basically this very young species, only 200,000 years old. We're one of the newcomers, and we're going through the same process that other species go through, which is, how do I keep myself alive while taking care of the place that's going to k...
Water is at the center of every chemical reaction, and therefore should be the earth's most precious gift.
There are three types of biomimicry - one is copying form and shape, another is copying a process, like photosynthesis in a leaf, and the third is mimicking at an ecosystem's level, like building a nature-inspired city.
Organisms don't think of CO2 as a poison. Plants and organisms that make shells, coral, think of it as a building block.
Trees and bones are constantly reforming themselves along lines of stress. This algorithm has been put into a software program that's now being used to make bridges lightweight, to make building beams lightweight.