News

INSIDE your Guinness can lurks a secret – a tiny plastic ball that makes sure the iconic creamy head is achieved. Called widgets, these plastic balls blast the stout beer with nitrogen gas to… ...
96 million shade balls cover its surface. — -- The Los Angeles Reservoir looks like a giant ball pit. The city poured 96 million, black, four-inch plastic balls over the surface of its 175 ...
Sydney Chase, president of XavierC, one of the shade ball supply companies behind the project, said the color is a result of pure black carbon being added to the high density polyethylene plastic ...
Now, British scientists have taken a page out of nature’s colorful book, using nanotechnology to create color-changing plastic that could make the world of the future a bit more brilliant.
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power dropped the ball Monday. Actually, it dropped 400,000 of them. The agency started dumping thousands of floating plastic balls into Ivanhoe Reservoir ...
Los Angeles has deployed 96 million black "shade balls" in its reservoirs to protect its water supply from contaminants and evaporation.
Three years ago, the drought-stricken city of Los Angeles covered the surface of the LA Basin with 96 million shade-providing floating balls, in order to keep the water beneath from evaporating ...
In an effort to meet EPA regulations, conserve water and prevent algae growth in the Los Angeles Reservoir, officials are using 96 million plastic balls to cover the water's surface.
Komodo Pickleball acknowledges that players won't switch to a new ball, regardless of its eco-friendliness, if it doesn't perform well on the court.
Over several months, city officials have been unleashing 96 million black plastic balls into the city's 175-acre reservoir in an effort to fight the effects of California's drought.
The government is warning people to stay out of those giant see-through inflatable spheres known as "water walking balls" because of the risk of suffocation or drowning.