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Helping Ideas Become Solutions
Great ideas need friends. Since 2004, the Stanford Woods Institute has awarded $8.5 million in Environmental Venture Projects (EVP) seed grants to 56 interdisciplinary research teams working in 24 countries. These projects have led to innovative
environmental solutions such as natural resources valuation software and biodegradable building materials. They have garnered more than $39 million in follow-on
funding and have involved faculty from all of Stanford's seven schools. We look forward to seeing what this year's winners achieve. Read on to learn more about the 2013 EVPs and other exciting news.
Sincerely, |
Debbie Drake Dunne
Executive Director |
Jeffrey R. Koseff
Perry L. McCarty Director |
Barton H. Thompson, Jr.
Perry L. McCarty Director |
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Environmental Venture Projects Awarded
A breakthrough for measuring marine animal populations, a natural approach to curbing parasitic infections and a new method for evaluating bridge
vulnerability. These transformative initiatives are among the Environmental Venture Projects announced this week by the Stanford Woods Institute. The annual grants are awarded for interdisciplinary research
aimed at finding practical solutions to major environmental and sustainability challenges.
Here are the 2013 Environmental Venture Projects. Principal investigators are in bold.
- Conducting marine censuses using environmental DNA: Alexandria Boehm, Larry Crowder, Ryan Kelly, Kevan Yamahara and Jesse Port
- Reducing parasitic infections through the introduction of a natural predator: Michael Hsieh, Giulio De Leo and Susanne Sokolow
- Understanding how insect-borne diseases are transmitted using a new precision measurement tool: Manu Prakash and David Schneider
- Determining the role of wastewater treatment ammonium outputs in San Francisco Bay-Delta fish decline: Christopher Francis, Kevin Arrigo and Stephen Monismith
- Assessing the impact of climate change on bridge infrastructure: Sarah Billington, Noah Diffenbaugh, David Freyberg and Oliver Fringer
- Identifying pathways of exposure to lead contamination: Stephen Luby, Scott Fendorf, Pascaline Dupas and Rosamond Naylor
- Informing species and land conservation strategies while supporting traditional livelihoods of Aborigines: Rebecca Bliege Bird, Risa Wechsler, Douglas Bird and Luis Fernandez
Photo credit: Susanne Sokolow
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Evolution Shapes New Rules for Ant Behavior
In ancient Greece, city-states that waited until their own harvest was in before attacking and destroying
rival communities' crops often experienced better long-term success. It turns out that ant colonies that show similar selectivity when gathering food yield a
similar result. The latest findings from a decades-long study by Stanford Woods Institute-affiliated biology Professor Deborah M. Gordon provide the first evidence of natural selection shaping collective behavior.
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For more research, see the Stanford Woods Institute quarterly Research Digest. |
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Scientific Consensus Reaches Leaders
Recently, California Gov. Jerry Brown has been circulating a document to leaders including Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. The document, an environmental consensus statement whose drafters include seven
Stanford Woods Institute senior fellows, lays out a global scientific consensus and offers broad-brush solutions for challenges including climate change, loss of
eco-diversity, extinctions, pollution, population growth and overconsumption of resources. More than 500 scientists from around the world, including two Nobel
laureates, have signed the statement so far. Anthony Barnosky, a University of California at Berkeley integrative biology professor and Cox Visiting Professor in
Stanford's Department of Environmental Earth Systems Science, and Woods Senior Fellow Elizabeth Hadly (Biology) led the effort to draft the statement.
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Preparing for Sea Level Rise, Boosting California's Economy
The California public overwhelmingly supports preparing now for the impacts of global warming and believes, more so than the general U.S. public,
that state government should take significant steps to lessen the consequences of sea level rise. Woods Senior Lecturer Meg Caldwell (Law) presented these and other findings in recent testimony before the California State Assembly Select Committee on Sea Level
Rise and the California Economy (watch video from 1:54). For her testimony, Caldwell, executive director of the Center for Ocean Solutions (COS), cited a recent poll commissioned by Woods and COS.
Photo credit: Kglavin
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'Emerging Explorer' Uses Technology to Combat Illegal Fishing
National Geographic named Stanford alumnus Shah Selbe an Emerging Explorer for his work on a technology that combats illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU)
fishing. During a graduate study program with the Center for Ocean Solutions, Selbe developed FishNET, a web-based system that relies on crowd-sourcing, drone
technology and satellites to monitor and report IUU fishing, especially in regions that lack sufficient monitoring and enforcement resources. FishNET captures and
analyzes data on fishing vessels and exploited areas. It promises to drastically improve the ability to manage human impact on oceans, shape effective ocean policy and maintain food security.
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New Software Promotes Nature's Delivery of Clean Water
Freshwater is one of the planet's most scarce resources. Demand for it is growing, and climate change threatens its supply. A new, free open-source software tool
developed by researchers from the Natural Capital Project at the Stanford Woods Institute
could be part of the solution. The Resource Investment Optimization System (RIOS)
incorporates local knowledge and preferences to help guide cost-effective investments in nature for clean and reliable water. It has been field tested throughout
Latin America and could prove useful anywhere in the world.
Photo credit: The Nature Conservancy
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Sanitation Solution Gets Kudos From Innovators
A sanitation project that received seed funding from Woods' Mel Lane Student Grants Program recently earned praise from some of the world's foremost experts in innovation. A panel of judges representing NASA, Silicon Valley
companies and Bay Area universities, among other institutions, named re.source as the best "Best
Overall Solution" in the Showcase of Solutions for Planetary Sustainability at the Sustainable Silicon Valley Water, Energy and Smart Technology Summit.
The initiative deploys portable, affordable dry household toilets in the developing world. It is now being field-tested in Haiti. Stanford civil and
environmental engineering Ph.D. students Sebastien Tilmans and Kory Russel co-founded re.source under the guidance of Woods Senior Fellow Jenna Davis (civil and environmental engineering), faculty lead for Woods' Water, Health and Development program.
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A Green and Blue Revolution in Africa?
Food and water security in sub-Saharan Africa remain elusive despite the region's abundance of arable land and untapped water resources. In the final
symposium of a two-year series on global food policy and food security hosted by the Center on Food Security and the Environment, water expert John Briscoe drew upon his many years of international field experience (including a 20-year career at the World Bank) to assess
Africa's situation and suggest ways forward. Among Briscoe's suggestions: Africa could learn from the example of middle-income countries such as Brazil that have
tapped agriculture and development potential through investments in infrastructure and agricultural productivity.
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The Future of Smart Energy
How is the U.S. Marine Corps changing the way it uses energy on the battlefield? What role can nanotechnology play in making computing more energy-efficient?
Attendees of the Energy & Environment Affiliates Program (EEAP) spring conference explored these and a
range of other far-reaching energy efficiency and smart energy issues. Speakers such as Tom Steyer, co-founding director of clean-energy advocacy group Next
Generation, and Guangyi Liu, director and chief engineer for China Electric Power Research Institute's Smart Grid Operation Research Center, addressed aspects of
modern and intelligent energy usage with application to specific industries.
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Selected media coverage of the Stanford Woods Institute and its
fellows, affiliated scholars and supported research |
Using 'Nature as an Asset' to Balance Costa Rica's Farming With Preservation
PBS, June 10
Senior Fellow Gretchen Daily (Humanities and Sciences) is featured in PBS series about climate change's affect on the food system |
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Turning Sharks and Seals Into Scientists
Popular Mechanics, May 30
Describes Tagging of Pacific Predators, an ocean species-tracking project involving Senior Fellow Barbara Block (Humanities and Sciences), among other researchers |
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Bridging the Science-to-Society Gap
Nature.com, May 24
Senior Fellow Liz Hadly (Biology) and Leopold Leadership Program fellows outline ways to bridge the "chasm between science and society" in three-part blog series |
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A Plan to Bring Sun-Powered Irrigation to Poor Farmers
The New York Times, May 20
Center on Food Security and the Environment Fellow Jennifer Burney outlines solar irrigation initiative for the developing world |
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Strong Coral in American Samoa Thrives in Warm Sea
Radio Australia, May 17
A radio interview with Senior Fellow Steve Palumbi (Biology) about corals that adapt to rising sea temperatures |
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Stanford Scientists Develop Underwater Labs to Study Coral and Climate Change
The Peninsula Press, May 15
Mentions Senior Fellow and Woods Co-Director Jeff Koseff (Civil and Environmental Engineering) and Lida Teneva, a fifth-year Earth Sciences Ph.D. student whose adviser is Senior Fellow Rob Dunbar (Earth Sciences) |
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The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change
Grist, May 12
Mentions recent survey of public opinion on climate adaptation by Senior Fellow Jon Krosnick (Communication and Political Science) |
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