Search: Water Quality and Management

Results 1 - 10 of 85

Results

Fellowships at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford

Name of job: 
Fellowships at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford
Description: 

The Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment is a major new project, directed
by Professor Sir David King, located in central Oxford, launching in October 2008.
The focus of the School is upon developing the academic and analytical knowledge
base to assist private enterprise and governments to manage critical global
environmental challenges, particularly climate change, and giving these issues
central prominence within the University community. The School will translate the
fundamental research by Fellows into advice for governments and enterprise around
the world, functioning along the lines set out by King and Thomas (2007). (King D.A.
and Thomas S.M. 'Science and Government: Taking Science Out of the Box-Foresight
Recast', Science. 2007, 316( 5832), pp. 1701 - 1702. DOI: 10.1126/science.1146051.)

Applications are invited for a number of new Fellowships for research into global
environmental problems, particularly climate change, with solutions at the nexus of
enterprise and government. The objective is to give scholars the resources and time
to think imaginatively about future global environmental challenges and solutions.
Fellows will be appointed at the Smith School in association with a core
disciplinary area, including business, economics, finance, geography, international
development, law, politics and international relations. Fellows are expected to be
leaders, or future leaders, in their home academic disciplines.

Fellows will work under the leadership of the Director, Professor Sir David King,
formerly the Chief Scientific Adviser to HM Government, and will be encouraged to
collaborate with other staff in the Smith School and departments across the
University of Oxford, including the Environmental Change Institute. Fellows may
choose to work upon areas including climate policy, carbon trading and environmental
finance, corporate climate strategies, environment and human behaviour, climate and
water systems stability, adaptation measures and finance, energy and economic
development, environmental microenterprise, international financial flows and
environmental policy, international environmental law and governance, climate change
negotiations, and interactions between the state, private and non-profit sectors.
Relevant sectors include energy, transport, buildings, water, land-use and forestry.

Initial appointments will be made from October 2008, for periods as short as six
months or as long as three years, may range from postdoctoral to senior research
fellow level and can include partial funding of sabbatical visitors. We are also
interested in hosting senior visitors on a negotiated basis. Fellows are welcome to
contribute to one or more of the undergraduate or postgraduate courses with an
environmental focus, within the University's existing departments. Applicants should
have a postgraduate degree and evidence of a commitment to collaborative and policy
relevant research and outreach. Senior appointments must have a strong record of
academic publishing and policy interaction and junior fellows must have outstanding
potential for academic and policy contributions.

Application deadline: 
April 14, 2008
Date posted: 
4/1/08

Big Ideas @ Berkeley Marketplace

Title: 
Big Ideas @ Berkeley Marketplace
Summary: 
Big Ideas @ Berkeley marketplace lets alumni, corporate and foundation partners, friends, and family support Berkeley undergraduate and graduate students who are passionate about tackling major global, regional, and local challenges such as clean energy, the environment, public health, safe drinking water, public policy, and technology-based entrepreneurship.
More Information: 
Supporters can sponsor a “Big Idea” in the following ways: 1)Make financial or in-kind contributions to specific projects 2)Sponsor a future "Bears Breaking Boundaries" contest 3)Help raise funds (using ChipIn) from their friends and colleagues 4)Provide students with advice and connections to potential partners. Environmental projects related to the environment can be found here: Environment & Energy: http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/13/all/all Global Development: http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/22/all/all Health: http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/14/all/all Human Rights & Social Justice: http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/23/all/all Public Policy:http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/25/all/all Science & Technology: http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/projects/26/all/all

Gadgil, Ashok

Name: 
Ashok Gadgil
Research Interests: 
Ashok Gadgil has active research in energy use and airflows in buildings. He also has long and active research in analysis, research, development and implementation of technologies for improved energy-efficiency and environmental performance in the developing countries, in a range of sectors.
Achievements: 
Ashok Gadgil received an award from San Jose’s (CA) Tech Museum of Innovation, which honors people who use technology to help humanity, for developing a water purification system that kills bacteria with ultraviolet light. The system, called UV Waterworks and marketed by WaterHealth International, Inc., is used daily by about 300,000 people in Mexico, the Philippines, and several other countries. Several systems will soon be installed in his native India. Money is currently being raised to install the system in tsunami-stricken regions of Sri Lanka and India. His invention appeared in Forbes Magazine in 2003. Ashok Gadgil is also developing a cheap and effective way to provide safe drinking water to 60 million Bangladeshis who live under the specter of arsenic poisoning. His idea is to create arsenic filters from coal ash, the fine gray powder that piles up at the bottom of furnaces at all coal-fired power stations, waiting to be discarded. Although still in the investigational stage, Gadgil’s technique would involve coating the ash with a compound that attracts arsenic, filling teabag-sized pouches with the powder, and distributing the filters throughout the countryside, one per family per day. Water drawn from any one of the millions of contaminated wells that dot Bangladesh could then be poured through the filter and safely consumed. Gadgil has numerous publications spanning the areas of drinking water efficiency and indoor air quality.
Picture: 
GadgilAJ.jpg
Department Name: 
Energy and Resources Group, Adjunct Professor

Environmental Indicators

Title: 
Environmental Indicators
Summary: 
A literature review of environmental inidicator collection at the city level combined with best practice data collection approaches is urgently needed to improve the way cities manage their resources. USI teams in transportation, urban design and water/santiation can provide guidance
More Information: 
As the old engineering addage goes, you can't manage what you don't measure. Urban sustainability efforts have been constrained by the ability of cities to cost-effectively monitor the quality of urban environments, in particular in relation to energy, water quality, sanitation, and air pollution. When this information is collected, differences in methods does not allow for comparison between cities for benchmarking. The United Nations and the World Bank have embarked on ambitious efforts to create networks of cities to collect sustainability information. Unfortunately, progress to coordinate the collection of environmental indicators has been hindered by cost, and lack of unified approach.
Description of organization: 
The Berkeley Institute of the Environment (BIE), established in 2005, brings together and helps enhance the diverse campus programs and research units with foci in the environment in new and innovative ways.
Contact person: 
Chris Jones
Contact e-mail: 
Funded?: 
Maybe

Environmental Law and Policy

Department: 
Boalt
Course Number: 
271
Course Title: 
Environmental Law and Policy
Instructor: 
Doremus, Farber
Description: 
This introductory course is designed to explore fundamental legal and policy issues in environmental law. By focusing on constitutional issues and a limited number of federal statutes--principally the the Administrative Procedure Act, the Clean Air Act; the Clean Water Act; CERCLA (the Superfund law),; the National Environmental Policy Act; and the Endangered Species Act--the course exposes students to the principal approaches to environmental law (litigation, command and control regulation, market incentives, and providing information), as well as to the challenges of setting environmental policy goals and choosing policy targets. The course is designed both for students who intend to pursue environmental studies further and for those who simply want to gain a basic understanding of this key area of public policy.
Units: 
3
Offered: 
Fall
Course Type: 
Graduate

Stacey, Mark

Name: 
Mark Stacey
Research Interests: 
Environmental fluid mechanics; transport and mixing in stratified flows; estuarine, lake and coastal ocean circulation; coupled physical-biological modeling; inverse modeling and parameter estimation.
Picture: 
stacey.jpg
Department Name: 
Civil and Environmental Engineering, Associate Professor

The Water Planet

Department: 
EPS
Course Number: 
3
Course Title: 
The Water Planet
Instructor: 
Dietrich
Description: 
An overview of the processes that control water supply to natural ecosystems and human civilization. Hydrologic cycle, floods, droughts, groundwater. Patterns of water use, threats to water quality, effects of global climate change on future water supplies. Water issues facing California.
Units: 
2
Offered: 
Fall and Spring
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

Energy and Environmental Policy Associate for Silicon Valley Leadership Group

Name of job: 
Energy and Environmental Policy Associate for Silicon Valley Leadership Group
Description: 

The Silicon Valley Leadership Group is seeking an Energy and Environmental Policy
Associate to focus on organizational priorities in these subject areas through
policy advocacy and program implementation.

Roles and Responsibilities include:
Environmental and Energy Policy Committee support: Staff monthly meetings and
working groups, including meeting planning, logistics, and procuring guest speakers.
Be responsive to Committee member concerns and assist in member outreach and
engagement. Track our internal decision-making process and follow up on action
items.

Legislative and Regulatory Issues: For select priority areas, monitor and report on
key issues, milestones, and collect input. Write issue briefs for member
consideration, using internet-based research, policy reports, and contacting
experts. Prepare materials and talking points for use in advocacy. Policy areas
include competitive energy markets, energy efficiency and renewable energy,
chemicals and waste materials, water reliability, and climate change.

Projects and programs: Management of multi-million dollar energy efficiency program,
including contractor and client relationships, program marketing and reporting,
invoicing, and program strategy. Support multiple on-going projects by promoting
participation, communicating progress, and adapting strategy. Projects include our
Clean & Green Energy Action Plan, as well as partnerships with other organizations
such as Sustainable Silicon Valley.

Events: Support and occasionally spearhead event planning efforts, including
coordination with partners, logistics, speaker management, marketing, and promotion.
Past events include annual Energy Summit and workshops on water efficiency, climate
change policy, solar power, demand response, and carbon offsets.

General:

· Represent the Leadership Group to media, regulators, policymakers, and community leaders through speeches, testimony, stakeholder groups, presentations, and events.

· Manage and mentor volunteer interns, including recruitment, training, and mentoring.

Skills:

· Have excellent interpersonal, diplomatic, verbal and written communication skills

· Be a self-starter, able to work independently and with a multi-disciplinary team

· Manage time well with competing priorities. Professional and results-focused.

· Quickly develop a rapport with member constituents and partner organizations

· Thrive in creative, dynamic, and challenging environment

· Have some familiarity with the California legislative and regulatory process

Qualifications:

We will be hiring for 0-3+ years of experience. Job title and competitive salary
will be commensurate with experience and training. We will consider a range of
experience and academic degrees (undergraduate degree is a minimum). Preferred
academic disciplines or experience include public policy, political science,
engineering, economics, energy, and environmental science. Applicants should have a
strong interest in public policy.

About our team: We are a dynamic, passionate team where everyone pitches in and
supports organizational priorities and events. This will include staffing
high-profile events, participation in advocacy trips with city, county, and state
leaders, and participation in various organization-sponsored gatherings. This may
include some early morning and evening engagements. Our offices are based in San
Jose within walking distance of the airport, Guadalupe River Trail, and public
transit.

To apply, please submit a cover letter, resume, and three references to
aballard@svlg.net with "Energy and Environmental Policy Associate" in the subject.

About the Leadership Group:

Founded in 1978 by David Packard of Hewlett-Packard, the Leadership Group represents
250 of Silicon Valley's most respected employers on issues, programs and campaigns
that address major public policy issues affecting the economic health and quality of
life in Silicon Valley. We advocate for adequate affordable housing, comprehensive
regional transportation, reliable cost-effective energy, a quality K-12 and higher
education system and prepared workforce, a sustainable environment, and business and
tax policies that keep California and Silicon Valley competitive. Leadership Group
members collectively provide nearly 250,000 local jobs, or one of every four private
sector jobs in Silicon Valley. The Leadership Group is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and a
Santa Clara County Certified Green Business. We have a staff of 19 employees along
with interns and volunteer executives.

Contact e-mail: 
Date posted: 
4/2/08

Issues in Chemistry

Department: 
CHEM
Course Number: 
98B
Course Title: 
Issues in Chemistry
Description: 
This seminar will focus on one or several related issues in society that have a significant bearing on chemistry. Particular topics will differ from course section to course section and from year to year. Representative examples: atmospheric ozone, nuclear waste, solar energy, water, agrichemicals. Students will search information sources, invite expert specialists to speak, prepare oral and written reports.
Units: 
1
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

Environmental Microbiology

Department: 
CIV ENG
Course Number: 
114
Course Title: 
Environmental Microbiology
Instructor: 
Alvarez-Cohen
Description: 
The scope of modern environmental engineering requires a fundamental knowledge of microbial processes with specific application to water, wastewater and the environmental fate of pollutants. This course will cover basic microbial physiology, biochemistry, metabolism, growth energetics and kinetics, ecology, pathogenicity, and genetics for application to both engineered and natural environmental systems
Units: 
3
Offered: 
Fall
Course Type: 
Undergraduate