Stories and examples
There's a LOOOONG list of examples and ideas once you start looking.
In California’s San Joaquin Valley, a long history of artificial irrigation has impregnated the soil with selenium. In small quantities, selenium is beneficial to humans and animals — essential, even. In larger quantities, it’s toxic.” So they're using a local cactus to clean up the poisonous soil.
Coffins made out of mushroom fibre (mycellium) are being used in the Netherlands to speed up natural decomposition - and mycellium can be grown on all sorts of waste (even plastics).
The Ray of Hope Prize - run annually by the Biomimicry Institute - has a whole range of examples to explore. The 2021 finalists included:
- a white pigment made from cellulose to replace titanium dioxide
- a building material made of mycellium and plant waste to replace wall board, bricks and concrete
- a silk replacement based on spiderweb that can be made at room temperature with only water as a byproduct.
There's a wealth of ways that we can expect biomimicry to challenge the high-energy, extractive, polluting approach to design - and there are potential "Kodak moments" on the horizon for a whole range of industries.
("Kodak moment" - the moment Kodak faced when smartphones started taking no-flilm-required digital pictures.)