A U.K. tech company called Pavegen has invented a way to generate renewable energy from people’s footsteps. Stepping onto a Pavegen tile just one time releases 3-5 joules of electric charge, which is ...
“Our mission is to change the world one step at a time,” says Laurence Kemball-Cook, the founder and CEO of Pavegen. He means it literally – Pavegen has pioneered technology that captures the kinetic ...
Pavegen is turning footsteps into electricity–yet another reason to get in those 10,000 steps per day. The King’s Cross, London-based company’s technology converts footsteps into electricity, making ...
There was once a time when Pavegen founder, Laurence Kemball-Cook, had to break into a site to forcibly install his innovative technology. Today, Pavegen tiles, the unique flooring technology capable ...
When you read about clean energy, visions of wind turbines and solar panels may dance in your head. But what about your feet and using pedestrian power? British-based company Pavegen has been creating ...
Consider what it would be like if every step you take could power up your home. We are moving towards a world where your footsteps matter. This newer, scalable energy solution is becoming a reality ...
Pavegen, the award-winning global cleantech pioneers, has today unveiled three new interactive installations at iconic London spaces as it announces its latest crowdfunding campaign. The 'Step Up for ...
New tile will harvest up to *30x more energy than the original tile, in optimal conditions, and enables Pavegen to combine the power of footsteps with the power of the sun Pavegen can now help smart ...
This story was originally published by Wired and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. As Fitbit users like to point out, walking burns a lot of calories. But the energy you ...
LONDON, June 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Pavegen, the award-winning global cleantech pioneers, has today unveiled three new interactive installations at iconic London spaces as it announces its ...
Generating small amounts of electricity from people’s footsteps isn’t going to solve the energy crisis, or convince hardened critics about the merits of renewable energy. But it would make everyone ...