Faculty News
- Several environmental engineering faculty members have recently had their work highlighted in The Conversation, a news website that specializes in commentary and analysis written by academics and edited by journalists.Â
- A CU Â鶹ӰԺ and Millennium Water Alliance-led program committed to ending humanitarian drought emergencies in the Horn of Africa has been named one of the Top 100 in the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation 100&Change competition, and remains in the running for the competition’s award of a single $100 million grant.
- Karl Linden has been selected to receive the Borchardt-Glysson Water Treatment Innovation Prize.
- Cresten is continually occupied by understanding the interaction between humans, material transformation, and microbial processes on multiple scales (industrial, municipal, riverine). His most recent projects include modelling the community dynamics involved in wastewater microbial systems, determining the interaction of Eukaryotic microbes with trace organic contaminants in municipal waste, and tracking the influence of the treated wastewater treatment plant effluent on riverine systems.
- Two visiting scholars will be joining Professor Mark Hernandez Group this semester: Sara Beck and Eddie Fuques Villalba.
- With 2019 on pace as one of the warmest years on record, a major new study from an international team of researchers reveals how rapidly the Arctic is warming and examines global consequences of continued polar warming.
- Professor Joseph Kasprzyk was honored with a Schreyer Honors College Outstanding Scholar Alumni Award at the College’s Fall Awards Ceremony on Nov. 1.
- Professor John Crimaldi was recently elected to the 2019 class fellows of the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO)!
- Watch the 9News interview of EVEN professor Joseph Ryan, regarding his research and PhD student Holly Miller’s findings of arsenic presence in unregulated and privately owned wells in Colorado.
- No matter where you are in the world, Professor Karl Linden wants you to be able to turn on a tap and receive clean drinking water. It’s a basic, but vital, necessity that’s still missing from large swathes of the U.S. and low- and middle-income countries.