News for Release:
Thursday, April 26, 2007
U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)
College Students Lead the U.S. towards a Greener Future
EPA P3 Awards Winners
Contact: Suzanne Ackerman, (202) 564-4355 / ackerman.suzanne@epa.gov
(Washington, D.C. - April 26, 2007) Students from Western Washington
University drove from Washington State to Washington, D.C., in a car
entirely powered by biodiesel fuel made from recovered landfill methane.
Northwestern students built a solar powered system that provides electricity
to a rural town in Panama, miles away from any electric power grid. The
University of Virginia team designed and built a floating "learning barge,"
that teaches about cleaning up and restoring plant to a river area by doing
it! These were just a few of the winning projects at EPA's People,
Prosperity and the Planet (P3) awards ceremony last night.
This national competition, sponsored by EPA's Office of Research and
Development, enables college students create sustainable solutions to
environmental problems through technology innovation. These sustainable
solutions must be environmentally friendly, efficiently use natural
resources and be economically competitive. Each P3 award includes funding up
to $75,000 that gives the students an opportunity to further develop their
designs and move them to the marketplace.
"The Bush Administration believes that American innovation is the key to
solving our nation's – and our world's – environmental challenges," said EPA
Administrator Stephen L. Johnson. "Not only are these students unleashing
the power of the possible to meet tomorrow's challenges, they are proving
that doing what's good for our planet can also be good for the bottom line."
Winners of this year's awards and their projects are:
· Appalachian State University, Boone, N.C., The Affordable Bioshelters
Project: Testing Technologies for Affordable Bioshelters
· Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa., Containment of Highly Concentrated
Arsenic-laden Spent Regenerant on the Indian Subcontinent
· Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., Solar Photovoltaic System Design
for a Remote Community in Panama
· University of Illinois at Urbana, Champaign, Ill., An Innovative System
for Bioremediation of Agricultural Chemicals for Environmental
Sustainability
· University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., The Learning Barge:
Environmental + Cultural Ecologies on the Elizabeth River
· Western Washington University, Bellingham, Wash., Bio-Methane for
Transportation
The P3 Award competition was held at EPA's 3rd National Sustainable Design
Expo on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on April 24 and 25. The Expo
showcases innovative, cutting-edge technologies designed by the P3 teams
along with sustainable policies and technologies developed and implemented
by government and state agencies and nonprofit organizations. Support for
the competition includes more than 40 partners in the federal government,
industry and scientific and professional societies.
More information about the P3 Award competition:
http://www.epa.gov/p3
P3 award winners and their projects:
http://www.epa.gov/p3/07winners
EPA's sustainability research program:
http://www.epa.gov/sustainability
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